Only once did the chickens fly — or fence-hop — into Nancy Engberg's neighbor's yard in north Minneapolis.
And no, it wasn't just to cross the road to get to the other side.
"I watched them go over," Engberg said, describing a mildly alarming incident early in her tenure tending to an urban coop. "Otherwise, they were pretty happy at home."
But other tasks awaited Engberg when she purchased her backyard flock of hens more than a decade ago. Even today — after national egg prices soared in December to more than $4 a dozen, prompting more people to consider becoming poulterers — Engberg warns it's not for the casually interested. It's not just a matter of throwing up a coop and purchasing chicks from Fleet Farm to source DIY eggs, the experienced flock owner said.
"This really is a hobby for animal lovers," said Engberg, who works for Minneapolis Animal Care and Control by day. "Feed costs money. The initial outlay for the coop and things ... it's not easy."
But that doesn't mean you shouldn't do it, so long as you're prepared to stick out this journey into aviculture. Here are some tips to help your flock take flight.
Set you eggs-pectations
The backyard chicken renaissance lifted off the ground — awkwardly, slightly, like a prairie chicken flapping into a tree — during the pandemic. Food supply lines tapered to a trickle. Anxieties abounded about the origin of meat to milk to eggs. In response, communities in Minnesota adopted backyard-flock-friendly ordinances.