Home > Backyard chickens on display at the Tour des Coops
Backyard chickens on display at the Tour des Coops
By Steve Horn
Created 06/29/2012 - 7:48am
[1]
For most Madisonians, the only place spelled “c-o-o-p” providing local and organic groceries is on Willy Street. But residents in the Tenney-Lapham Neighborhood go to a different kind of “c-o-o-p” for their fresh food.
The neighborhood is home to a number of backyard poultry enthusiasts, whose chicken coops were on display at the Fourth Annual Tenney-Lapham Neighborhood Association’s Tour des Coops on June 23. Twelve urban farmers who live with a few blocks of each other opened their homes to community members to show off their homemade coops. Farmers ranged from new arrivals, to renters, to long-time-residents.
City law states has the following regulations regarding backyard coops: they can hold four chickens (none of which can be roosters); they must be at least 25-feet from neighboring homes; and chickens must be enclosed or fenced in at all times.
Neither these easy-to-follow guidelines nor the small risk of losing a chicken to predators (mostly to possums and raccoons) outweigh the benefits of receiving fresh eggs every morning .
In the following slideshow, you will hear from a number of farmers including Amy Alstad, who inherited her coop from the previous owners of her home; Matt Seibel, whose last chicken, “Foxi Brown,” lives in a coop modeled after a Despression-era “Hooverville” shanty; a renter, Sarah, who built her coop out of recycled materials from her childhood playhouse; and Alan Crossley, a 20-plus-year Tenney-Lapham resident who built his coop a year ago and now has a fully-sustainable backyard garden in the heart of Madison.
For a full list and descriptions of the coops on the tour, see here[2].