Mini Encyclopedia of Chicken Breeds and Care
A Color Directory of the Most Popular Breeds and Their Care

Description
A comprehensive and richly illustrated guide to keeping chickens.
Keeping chickens became very popular 15 years ago when cities eased restrictions and small-scale farmers in cities and in the country relished the flavor and nutritional benefits of free-range eggs, and the meat of chickens that lived a good life - away from factory farms.
Now the inflation in food prices gives new impetus to growing your own, and that's especially true of chickens. This book is packed with sensible advice and practical guidance for all aspiring poultry keepers.
It explores all aspects of keeping chickens, including housing, day-to-day management, feeding, breeding, chicken behavior and - for those who take special pride in their breeds - showing at fairs.
Part One: Practical Section contains information on selection of breed, housing, management and feeding, eggs, breeding chickens, understanding chicken behavior, health care and showing birds.
Part Two: Chicken Breed Profiles shows and describes breeds from Ancona to Yokohama (light breeds), and from Australorp to Wyandotte (heavy breeds), plus bantams and game breeds. Each breed is described in words and color photographs.
This is a down-to-earth and useful book that can get anyone started on keeping chickens - or continuing with chickens but doing it better.
About this Author
Frances Bassom is chairperson of the Surrey Poultry Society and a member of the Rare Poultry Society. She has developed a new variant of the Vorwerk bantam and is working to preserve a chocolate gene found in the Minorca bantam.
Reviews
Frances Bassom offers a plethora of information on raising chickens in her Mini Encyclopedia of Chicken Breeds & Care: A Color Directory of the Most Popular Breeds and Their Care. In the first half of the book, Bassom covers the basics, including housing, feeding, breeding and showing chickens. The second half acts as an encyclopedia, describing characteristics of certain breeds, such as size, feather patterns, and the color of the eggs they lay. Raising poultry for food not only adds to a healthy lifestyle, the author notes, it also helps lower a homeowner's carbon footprint by reducing the distance food travels to reach the plate.
Frank and abundant detail ... handy, heavily illustrated.
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