This is in response to a story (Feb. 12) about Lewiston City Councilors considering allowing chickens in some areas within city limits and letters responding to that story.
I was raised on a dairy farm. We always had at least 50 chickens, so I know:
— About 20 percent of the owners will not be responsible or think of the effect on their neighbors;
— There is nothing that smells as bad as chicken manure (and I grew up on a big dairy farm);
— You cannot clean it out of your grass;
— If there is any slope to a yard, when it rains, neighbors get it washed onto their property;
— There is no feeder that will keep out rats and mice, which will come to a constant food source and stay and reproduce;
— Skunks like to eat chickens and they will come to do that;
— City residents don’t have the luxury of taking a shotgun to a skunk that, once it has eaten chicken, will keep coming back;
— Any manure source draws flies — a huge issue;
— Dogs (that were not raised around chickens) that are perfectly fine in their own yard will try to kill chickens or, at the very least, constantly bark at them;
— The ability to properly and humanely keep chickens during a long, cold winter requires a very good coop, which costs a substantial amount of money;
— The chickens would need fresh water at least twice a day in the winter because leftover water would freeze.
Chickens belong on farms.
Pete Alberda, Lewiston
Send questions/comments to the editors.
Comments are no longer available on this story