HOT TOPICS >> Why homestead? • Gas prices • Great places • Save money • Preserve food

Chickens for Pest Control

Readers weigh in on the best benefits of chickens defending the homestead from grasshoppers, scorpions, termites, rats and mice, flies and pillbugs.

Article Tools

There are lots of grasshoppers around here, but my hens patrol the garden perimeter fence and really reduce the numbers of insects in the garden. Before I got the hens, some crops were totally destroyed by the 'hoppers. The hens also have helped control scorpions — they peck off the stinger and then work on the rest.

The chickens also have reduced the fire ant population by eating the bugs and seeds the ants would have sustained themselves on. I have no ticks here, but the chickens have reduced one nasty pest that had been around everywhere — termites.

M. WADE
New Braunfels, Texas


We have a 40-acre horse farm. Unfortunately, where there are horse barns there also are rats and mice. The horses leave bits of grain on the ground after they eat, and some undigested grain shows up in their manure. With all of this food, we had a serious rat and mouse problem.

My grandfather set out rat poison, and a trip to the veterinarian and $500 later, I found out that my Jack Russell terrier really likes the taste of it. She is fine, but I refuse to allow any more poison on our farm.

Instead, we got chickens. The birds accompany the horses and clean up all the grains on the ground and in the horses' manure. Their careful gleaning eliminates the source of food for the mice and rats, and now the pests have all but disappeared.

The benefit I had not counted on when I added chickens to our farm is that now we no longer have a flea problem. The chickens also help control files and lawn grubs. I love having the chickens. Not only do they control unwanted pests, but they are fun to watch, too. We have experimented with several different breeds, but our favorites are Silkies and Barred Rocks.

TINA DURBOROW
Lewisville, Pennsylvania

When we came to Cross Plains during a long drought, we found that our windmill supplied plenty of water for a garden, so we planted one. Next we knew, thousands of grasshoppers came from every direction and left us with bare stalks.

To beat the 'hoppers, we built a chicken and turkey run that surrounds our garden. The fencing is 5 feet high and has occasional cross fencing to keep hawks from swooping in and snatching up one of the chickens. Any grasshoppers that approach the garden have to move into this "moat," where the chickens and turkeys quickly gobble them up.

Page: 1 | 2 | Next >>



Subscribe Today - Pay Now & Save 66% Off the Cover Price

Save More Money & Trees!

Pay with a credit card now and take advantage of our Earth-Friendly automatic renewal savings plan. You save a total of $9.95 and get 6 issues of Mother Earth News for only $10.00 (USA only).

Mother Earth News offers you practical information on cutting energy costs, do-it-yourself home improvements, organic gardening, self-sufficiency, sustainable technologies and much more!

OR choose the "BILL ME" option and we'll bill you $14.95 for 6 issues of Mother Earth News. That's still a $5 savings off the regular price of $19.95!

First Name: *
Last Name: *
Address: *
City: *
State/Province: *
Zip/Postal Code:*
Country:
Email:*
(* indicates a required item)
Canadian subs: 1 year, $15.50 (includes postage & GST). Foreign subs: 1 year, $18.00. U.S. funds.
Canadian Subscribers - Click Here
Non US and Canadian Subscribers - Click Here