whether or not you can keep a horse in your backyard will depend on your local zoning laws regarding livestock. Unless otherwise noted in the city or county laws you must have agriculture or residential agriculture zoning to keep livestock, which includes horses. These laws will also state how much land you must have to keep a horse ( in many places it's a minimum of 1 to 5 acres per horse.) the majority of urban areas specifically ban the keeping of large animals like horses and cattle in backyards for sanitary purposes.
It depends on the local regulations and zoning laws in your area. In many places, keeping a limited number of chickens in your garden is allowed, as long as you follow specific guidelines regarding coop size, noise control, and waste management. Make sure to check with your city or municipality for any restrictions or permits required.
Yes, they do. Tomatoes are a favorite.
chickens have mud baths to get the tiny parasites off their feathers. If your chicken is having mud baths in your garden it would be wise to cover up that place and show your chicken another one. If you don't have anywhere else it would not be wise for you to keep chickens for mud bathing is a vital thing.
Nope, not yet anyway
Not usually. Roosters are noisy and cannot be trained to us a litter box. Most apartment building managers/owners would have a problem with a tenant keeping a rooster. Even caged they will crow loudly at all hours. If you just gotta have one ,best to find a backyard for it.
Garden gnomes are not known to keep chickens away from a garden or yard. Garden gnomes are generally used as decorative items rather than to frighten birds.
Keep the chickens out of the garden
Keep the chickens out of the garden
It depends on the local regulations and zoning laws in your area. In many places, keeping a limited number of chickens in your garden is allowed, as long as you follow specific guidelines regarding coop size, noise control, and waste management. Make sure to check with your city or municipality for any restrictions or permits required.
For residential areas, a person wishing to keep chickens in a back garden, must check with the local community laws. 1. Some areas do not allow residents within the town or community limits to keep any livestock, including chickens. 2. Others will allow chickens for egg production on the condition that no roosters are allowed, since roosters are the noisy members of the chicken flock. 3. Finally there is the chance that the area has no laws governing small livestock in backyards, and the chicken owner will have to rely on the wishes of his near neighbors as to whether or not he can keep roosters in his flock.
No not at all, in fact free range chickens will wipe out your garden faster than the occasional grazing deer. Deer are pretty selective in a garden and not at all nervous around chickens but a chicken flock will scratch and hunt everything green then root around in the destruction for bugs.
Shoot them. The hawk not the chicken. Once they get a taste of your chickens they just keep coming back.
1 every attack. But the fox will keep coming back until all of the chickens are eaten.
Black bear
Well at the moment we have our four chickens tethered by one of their legs on the front lawn. It is to keep them away from my garden and hostas as well as from scratching up my flower garden. They seem to be content.
You can keep a horse in a livery yard,a back garden may not be big enough.
Depends how big is your garden ;)