Barks & Beaks Farm

Barks & Beaks Farm Free range, home grown chicken eggs. Good for the soul. We can also collect hatching eggs for you.

01/06/2026

friendly reminder, the goats will happily take your unwanted Christmas trees!

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12/27/2025

🐔 The Retired Hen: "I MADE YOUR BREAKFAST FOR 3 YEARS. I PAID MY RENT."
I’M NOT A FREELOADER. I’M A RETIREE.

"For 1,000 days, my body worked overtime to put protein on your plate. I depleted my calcium and gave you my best years. Now that my laying has slowed, don't look at me as a waste of feed. I may have stopped laying eggs, but I still enjoy the sun. Please don't cull me. Let me live out my days scratching in the dirt. I didn't just inhabit this coop; I bought it with my labor."

The Biological Reality: Modern heritage and production breeds are genetically selected to lay 250–300 eggs a year. This is a massive physiological tax. By age 3 or 4, their supply of follicles decreases, and they enter "henopause." They aren't sick; they are simply done with the reproductive phase of their lives.

📰 FIELD REPORT: The Invisible Labor
Angle: The biological cost of the egg.

[BIOLOGICAL EVALUATION] Producing an eggshell takes a massive amount of calcium. A laying hen essentially mobilizes 10% of her total bone calcium every single day to form a shell. Over three years, her body has performed a metabolic marathon that no human athlete could sustain. When she stops laying, her body is finally entering a phase of restoration. To view a non-laying hen as "useless" is to ignore the biological debt she incurred to feed you.

THE UNSHOWN SIDES OF THE "SPENT" HEN
1. The Garden's Best Employee
The Nitrogen Cycle: Even without eggs, a chicken is a composting machine. She turns kitchen scraps and weeds into high-nitrogen manure (black gold) for your vegetable garden.

The Pest Patrol: An older hen is a seasoned hunter. She consumes ticks, grubs, and beetles that threaten your yard. She is still working; the output just shifted from "eggs" to "ecosystem management."

2. The Matriarchal Role
Flock Stability: Older hens often act as the "police" of the flock. They regulate the pecking order, guide younger pullets to food sources, and are more alert to predators (hawks/foxes) due to experience. Removing the elders often destabilizes the social structure of the coop, leading to bullying among younger birds.

3. The "Stew Pot" Myth
Culinary Reality: There is a romanticized notion of "coq au vin" or stewing an old bird. The reality is that the meat of a 4-year-old layer is tough, stringy, and offers little culinary value compared to a meat bird. Culling her is often more about "clearing space" than actual sustenance.

THE MANIFESTO: "THE PENSION PLAN"
"Stewardship extends beyond the harvest."
The Ethical Contract: If we keep animals for the pleasure of their company and their eggs, we owe them a life that spans their natural duration, not just their economic utility.

Reframing Cost: A retired hen eats about 1/4 lb of feed a day. The cost to keep her comfortable is pennies—a small price to pay for a life of service.

🤝 Our Duty: Senior Care for Flocks
Transitioning from "Production Manager" to "Retirement Home Director."

The Action: The Golden Years Protocol.

Lower the Roosts: Older hens often develop arthritis or bumblefoot from years of jumping. Lowering their roosting bars prevents injury.

Dietary Shift: They need less calcium (layer feed) and more protein to maintain feather quality and muscle mass as they age.

The "Flock Integration": If you get new chicks, don't get rid of the old girls. Introduce them slowly. The old hens will teach the young ones where the bugs are hiding.

Observation: Watch for quality of life. As long as she is eating, dust-bathing, and socially active, she is happy.

A hen is the only pet that pays rent. Once the lease is up, she shouldn't be evicted. She has earned the right to be just a bird, enjoying the warmth of the sun on her feathers without a quota to fill.

12/24/2025

Please remember that we will take your old Christmas trees for the goats! They are full of vitamin C!

10/10/2025

As fall rolls in, keep us in mind for your used pumpkins!!! The goats and birds will love it!

10/03/2025

I have 5 hatchlings chickens. Free. Easter egg ears. Hatched this morning 10-3-25

08/07/2025
05/03/2025

Hey. I’m out of egg cartons if anyone has some!

My mom found a double shell egg from one of my girls!!
04/23/2025

My mom found a double shell egg from one of my girls!!

04/16/2025
04/01/2025

Woke up this morning to find out the chickens have learned to bark. Guess they’ve been spending too much time with the dogs… This farm just keeps getting weirder.

Address

2172 Alfred Hartley Road
Lenoir, NC
28645

Telephone

+18282382066

Website

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