Maybe, maybe not
Taking your neighbors to court over damage by chickens should be a last resort. Poultry fencing is cheaper and much more friendly. If your neighbor allows free range chickens to wander into your garden try just asking them (the neighbors not the chickens) to stop it. If all else fails speak to your local animal control office or council rep. to see if there are bylaws to fall back on but be prepared for the expense of a larger fencing project and legal court costs. Not to mention animosity from the sued neighbor.
free range chickens are more free to move however caged chickens are like they are I prison and can hardly move
No
It depends, timid chickens will stay closer to their coop. Adventureous chickens may wander until their coop is no longer in sight
As free-range, natural, no hormones , cruelty-free. Whatever justifies the higher price. To me , they taste wild, like prairie chickens.
Most fruits are fine to feed to chickens. However, never feed your chickens any kind of citrus.
Free range chickens are raised outdoors with natural foods while industrial chicken houses have thousands of chickens in one place and are fed foods with antibiotics and steroids. Yuck.
You don't. "Free-range' chickens forage for their own food, so they must be a low-density (fewer chickens per acre) flock for the insects and greens naturally available to sustain them. Herding (chickens with a hen house and small yard, into which you throw feed, is NOT free range.
Chickens eat bugs on the ground if they are free range. Many chickens are living off of a grain as chicken feed.
You can always purchase chickens from hatcheries online, from local farms, or go to farm or feed stores that sell poultry at various times in the year, usually early spring or fall. I bought all my chickens as days old chicks and raised them to free range.
Well, how many cross the road?
Yes they do. A few free range chickens in your yard is a natural way to keep insects in control and you get free eggs in exchange.