by Miranda Gent
This is Lily, an ex-battery hen - before she was rescued and eight months later.
Everyone is always shocked when I tell them
that I keep chickens as pets, but to me it really isn't odd at all.
I've kept chickens since the age of about six
and I could not love them more. I think that they are much more adorable,
charismatic and sociable than many other far more common pets, such as rabbits,
who just blink at you and flare their nostrils, and guinea pigs, who spend
their lives hidden deep under piles of straw and are terrified by the sight of
you. These animals may be furry, but they are not my idea of friendly.
Chickens are simply far more interesting.
They are actually very sociable animals, which
indicates intellect, who always stay very close together and like spending time
with you, even when food isn’t involved, which is more than can be said for
many pets, such as hamsters. For example, my chickens spend a lot of time
sitting on our back doorstep where they can see us through the glass door and
they even go to the lengths of jumping onto tables, into plant pots or bushes
in order to be able to see us and (we like to think) to keep us company while
we work or if we’re home alone, as they are always very aware of who's in the
house, due to their amazing eyesight and hearing.
In fact, in many ways, my chickens shock my
family and I with their intelligence. For example, they know that plates or
bowls mean food, and have learnt their way around the ground floor of my house
after sneaking in multiple times when the doors have been left open. They have
also learnt to stay quiet when exploring the house because they know that if
they get caught they will be abruptly escorted from the vicinity.
Furthermore, unlike many animals, like cats,
they are not at all deceived by the confusing illusion that mirrors create of
there being another identical chicken staring back at you. In fact, they are
completely bored by their reflections and, after a momentary glance, they move
on quickly in their search for food or something more interesting.
Indeed, chickens are actually extremely
intelligent, as surprising as this may be to many people. At only three days
old, chickens are able to perform basic arithmetic and discriminate qualities,
as demonstrated by an experiment in which a group of chicks were presented with
two sets of objects which were then hidden by a screen, and amazingly the
chicks then managed to track the screen which hid the larger number of objects,
therefore apparently performing simple addition and subtraction.
Moreover, chickens have been proven to
exercise self-control, which doesn't usually appear in humans until four years
of age. This is validated by an experiment in which a group of hens were given
the option between a two second delay and six seconds of access to food, or a
six second delay with twenty-two seconds of access to food. The hens decided to
wait the six seconds for longer access to food.
In addition to this, chickens also have amazing
eyesight and better motion sensing abilities than we do. They can actually see
more of the colour spectrum than humans, as they can see ultraviolet light, so
they see everything differently. Hens use this ability to see ultraviolet light
in order to evaluate the condition of their chick’s feathers, which they can
see by how shiny they are, allowing them to determine which of their chicks are
the healthiest and most likely to survive. However, like humans, they are blind
in the dark, making them vulnerable to predators at night time. They also have
three eyelids, two which go up and down, and one which is clear and goes
sideways across the eye in order to clean and protect it.
Furthermore, what my family and I have always
noticed about chickens is how individual they all are, as they all have their
own separate and distinguishable personalities, which I think would surprise a
lot of people. We’ve had some chickens who have been more quiet and some who
have been more mischievous, demanding and chaos-causing. For example, we had a
hen, named Pickles, who was constantly causing trouble, such as digging up a
newly-planted flower bed or sneaking into the house when we made the mistake of
leaving the door open in warmer weather. Through her mischief, she actually
managed to develop a liking for tea after we caught her drinking from an
unattended mug of it left on an outside table one summer. I don’t think that
anyone could say the same about their pet guinea pig, hamster or rabbit. Maybe
budgie or duck. In fact, I feel that it's not only chickens who are underrated,
but birds in general. They mainly seem to be thought of as stupid and
uninteresting by society, which in my opinion is a great shame as I find them
to be the opposite.
As a result of these prejudices and
assumptions, chickens have been treated inhumanely in the farm industry for
many years, although improvements have been made recently. However, I believe
that there is more to be done, as highlighted by Jamie and Jimmy in a recent
episode of Jamie and Jimmy’s Friday Night Feast, in which I discovered
something that I am ashamed to say I had never known about or considered
before. Although we may buy free range eggs at the supermarket when we are
buying eggs individually, many of the eggs which are in numerous other products
such as cakes, mayonnaise and ice cream contain eggs from battery hens, not
free range hens.
Battery hens may have more space than they
used to, but many of them still live in cramped conditions, in cages inside
barns with little or no access to natural light. For me this is very upsetting,
as I regularly see how frustrated my two chickens get at being shut in their
generous sized cage meant for four chickens after just a couple of hours, and I
know that keeping hens in the cramped conditions that battery hens are
subjected to aggravates the hens so much that they begin to fight and bully
each other, leaving them all with very few feathers and in poor physical and
mental health, as hens who have to live like this become extremely miserable.
Moreover, being in these conditions, Battery hens never get the joy that they
so deserve of being able to run around and flap their wings and feel grass
under their feet. They never get to dig and scratch around and chase each other
in circles when one finds something exciting like a snail. I personally find
this heart-breaking, as in my mind chickens are certainly not stupid and dull
animals to be shut in cages for the best part of their egg-laying lives, then
to be taken to slaughter at about the age of two or three, when a few of my
chickens have lived to the age of about seven, and I think one of them might
have even reached eight. Therefore, I see this treatment of chickens as hideous
and completely unreasonable, and although we may not know it, when we buy
products containing eggs, we may be supporting the Battery hen industry.
Another example of cruelty to chickens is that
on many chicken farms the chickens have their beaks ‘clipped’, which means that
the pointy end of their beak is cut off, so that they can not harm each others’
feathers so much, for whatever reason, but the main one being fighting to
establish or maintain the pecking order. This is deemed necessary by most
industry farmers, as the flocks that they keep are very large, and the more
chickens that are kept together, the stronger the pecking order will be and the
more fighting there will be to establish and maintain it. So, ‘clipping’ beaks
may seem reasonable when approaching this matter with business in mind, but it
is actually completely illogical, as ‘clipping’ the beaks of chickens only
makes them more aggressive. This is because their beaks contain numerous nerve
endings and are highly sensitive, so ‘clipping’ them causes chickens immense
pain which could last for months, to the extent that this alters their
behaviour.
I would like to think that people would be
shocked and horrified to be informed of this management of chickens, as I don’t
think that it is something that many people will be aware of as people seem to
be under the allusion that animal cruelty is a thing of the past. However, I
strongly think that this is something that everyone should be aware of and take
action against, for example by checking where the eggs in their food are
sourced from, and the living conditions of the chickens who laid them.
As well as this, I hope that anyone who reads
this article will now think twice about chickens before tucking into their KFC
and perhaps even consider giving some a home, as I find that they are a true
delight! And if you could rescue battery hens, then even better. Just think of
the fate that you are saving them from and how much brighter their future
becomes when you decide to look after them.
Happy chicken-keeping :)
I have chickens as pets aswell and they are my best friends, they are way more sociable than any other animals including dogs. People don't understand their actual nature.
ReplyDeleteAt first I didn't think I would have chickens as pets, but one day , 2 chickens just showed up walking down our lane, we didn't know if they had been abandoned, so we took them in and we found how beatiful their nature is.