Brought to you by Emma Buckley, Kiva Dairy Department Manager
Anconda Duck Eggs in the nest at Rain Shadow El Rancho
Lonsway Farms:
Emma feeding the Red Star chickens at Lonsway Farms
Update: We now have videos from our visit to Lonsway Farms up at our website! Check it out!
Rain Shadow El Rancho
Joe and Karen Schueller started their farm in 2001 and have been raising chickens the entire time (as well as many other animals, check out their website to learn more!). They raise many different breeds of chickens, including Rhode Island Reds, Black Sex-Links, Araucana and Barred Rock.
Barred Rock Rooster at Rain Shadow El Rancho
Muscovy Ducks in the pond at Rain Shadow El Rancho
Update: We now have videos from our trip to Rain Shadow El Rancho up on our website! Check it out!
Sweet Briar Farms
This guy runs the roost at Sweet Briar. He followed us around the entire time, making sure we didn't cause any trouble with his ladies!Sweet Briar Farms is USDA certified and has a grant for brown power to reuse all the waste from the chickens and hogs to power the farm. They supplement their chickens' feed with flax seed, squash, garlic, carrots, kale, celery, seed blocks, corn and apple cider vinegar. Of course, the chickens also eat insects and other small creepy crawlies when they are pecking around in their fenced pasture area.
Emma, Dorothy and a chicken at Sweet Briar
Turpen Family Farms
Pamela Turpen and Dylan the Dog
Pamela Turpen and her husband have been running this family farm for 17 years with their two daughters. It is an entirely family run operation. They currently have 900 chickens. They raise many different kinds of chickens, including Golden Sex-Links, Araucana, Australorps , Rhode Island Reds and Barred Rock breeds. The chickens always have access to outdoor pastures on their 72 acre property. The chickens' diet is supplemented with alfalfa pellets, ground whole corn, yard clippings that have never been fertilized or sprayed with pesticides, and a layer pellet containing corn, soybean meal, and vitamins and minerals. The pellet does not contain hormones or antibiotics. As always, chickens feed themselves with bugs and whatever else they can dig up while pecking around outside.
This Barred Rock chicken always lays her eggs in the feeder at Turpen Farms instead of the egg boxes! She is very particular!
2 comments:
Awesome, Sustainability FTW!!!
Right on! I'm so happy to see the faces behind the local brands we always buy for the house! :^)
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