I Never Thought Chickens Would be this Good!

This Video is from the Youtube channel: “Off-Grid with Curtis Stone”. 

 

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About Curtis Stone:

Curtis is one of the world’s most highly sought-after small farming educators. His book, The Urban Farmer, offers a new way to think about farming𑁋 one where quality of life and profitability coexist. Today, Curtis spends most of his time building his 40-acre off-grid homestead in British Columbia. He leverages his relationships with other experts to bring diverse content into the homes of gardeners and aspiring small farmers from around the world. Learn more at FromTheField.TV.

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Music and Footage commonly used on this channel:

Sweeps – https://www.youtube.com/c/SweepsBeats
Biocratic – http://birocratic.com
The Muse Maker – https://soundcloud.com/themusemaker
David Cutter Music – https://davidcuttermusic.co.uk
https://artlist.io/Curtis-38762
Images – licensed via https://Envato.com
Video Footage – licensed via https://Envato.com
Music – licensed via artlist.io

 

Peter Grant
 

  • @Lepetitjardin348 says:

    Chickens are the unsung heroes of the farm. I love mine…

  • @philcoppa says:

    what does she do with the feathers?

  • @christysmith5211 says:

    Do you show fermentation process on your channel?
    More chicken content please Curtis

  • @davidakerlund6296 says:

    ive been saying for more than a dcade that chickens are employees, manage them correctly and the benefits far exceed the cost

    • @victorygarden556 says:

      What do you use them for personally? Compost, eggs, chicken, eat ticks? I like feral chickens as a concept, some towns have wild chicken populations year round. Could be a natural resource in some areas, but those ones are smaller so it’s a few birds to make a meat bird weight.

    • @davidakerlund6296 says:

      @@victorygarden556 i use them for garden prep, eggs, pest control, mulch production, meat, compost production, eggs as currency, take home scraps from work to feed them to utilize the nutrients that would end up in the land fill
      our climate here isnt good for feral chickens ive tried

  • @stephenross4333 says:

    I forget to feed the chickens first thing in the morning as well 🙂

  • @garys-half-baked-offgrid-dream says:

    I love my wee composting team!

  • @allonesame6467 says:

    when you move the hose lines, the chickens will scramble to that spot for the grubs & worms. The same will happen if you put log waste or slash. When you roll it over the chickens can get “free” food. The love the decomposers of the woods.

  • @creativeminds3220 says:

    Thank you

  • @steveo_o6707 says:

    I enjoyed this a bunch! “the annoying guy you didn’t invite”… lol

  • @seaday123 says:

    Good stuff Curtis … the rooster you don’t invite to the party!

  • @christinasirr7138 says:

    Love your chicken videos! Amazing creatures!😍

  • @itaintobeezy says:

    12 degrees and sunny down in Windsor today feels like spring in February

  • @timogerzen says:

    The house is looking good already! Let’s get a house build tour.

  • @odanethomas1073 says:

    For some who only deal with vegetables, his life got a major upgrade with the animals

  • @joshsleevisuals4090 says:

    Love this. Im just setting up a big compost in the corner using all my grass clippings, leaves etc i get from my gardening job. Id like to run a drain pipe through it connected to a solar powered fan to heat a polytunnel which i plan on builidng for winter once my summer and autumn crops are done. Also want a copper coil through it to get hot water. Theres a root right next to the pile too so i plan on collecting the water from that and running an irritation through the polytunnel. Bit by bit i want to get as “offgrid” and self sufficient as i can where i am with what i have. Ride that upwards spiral!
    That compost can then go back into my beds in summer or my customers beds.

  • @christianeniss5768 says:

    You can use them in the winter when snow in similar ways, put your compost you have collected over the summer in their poly tunnel and make Mountain of it and move it around every 2 days back on the mountain or from one side to the other so the keep interested in it! When season starts sift the compost and make a liquid fertiliser/ tea and you can serve a larger area or more often or heavier for hungry crops

  • @bugoutbubba3912 says:

    We do what you are suggesting but we do it with a timed deer feeder. Every time we fill it we move it around our garden. We set it to run a very short spirt every couple of hours and when the chickens hear it they come running. A plus to this method is that they stay near the feeder waiting on the next dispersement and away from our house and other buildings, concentrating their poop on the garden rather than our yard and porch. You’ll love it.

  • @tedbastwock3810 says:

    Followed you for years. You were an early influence in transforming my veg growing methods. So SO glad to see you doing well and leveraging your hard work into such an awesome looking place to live and thrive. Thanks for continuing to share with us. please more chickens from you.
    p.s. you have come a long way from your continental bicycle journey to your current mountain paradise haven’t you 🥰 Im sincerely happy to see you doing well, it really does make me happy.

  • @66bigbuds says:

    I like sprouting the grain before I feed it.

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