Pets with a purpose: Utahns turning to poultry

S.L. Valley's chicken owners enjoy the birds, eggs, potential dinner

Published: Sunday, Sept. 28 2008 12:19 a.m. MDT

Daysha Moore visits with Cookie, one of her chickens. She says they come when called by name and are low maintenance. Plus, the hens provide eggs.

Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

A national trend toward sustainable living has a number of Salt Lake Valley families turning to pet chickens for fresh food, free fertilizer and innocuous pest control.

Backyard chicken coops are popping up from West Valley City to Sugar House. But while the benefits of keeping pet birds are highly touted, some municipalities have banned the fowl in residential neighborhoods.

Salt Lake hairdresser Daysha Moore got her first chickens 2 1/2 years ago. The three hens produce far better eggs than those Moore could purchase, and neighbor kids love watching and chasing the hens, Moore said.

"They just think it's cool," she said. "They are kind of funny to watch."

The chickens come when called by name and eat right out of her hand, Moore said. Hens are also very low maintenance. They must be fed daily and their coops cleaned weekly, but they exercise and entertain themselves.

"They are self-sufficient," Moore said. "They really are just fantastic."

Salt Lake City allows pet chickens for a $5 annual fee, but roosters aren't allowed in neighborhoods.

In other places such as South Salt Lake and Holladay, hens for "personal use and consumption" are allowed on lots of at least half an acre, about 21,000 square feet.

In Taylorsville, chickens are allowed on lots of 10,000 square feet or more, but in Midvale hens are allowed only on acre-plus properties. Most municipalities allow roosters, which can be territorial, noisy and aggressive, on agricultural property only.

Wasatch Community Gardens education coordinator Maddy Corey keeps chickens and gives annual coop tours for those interested in fresh eggs from their own backyards. This summer, 80 people attended the tour and an information session on urban chickens, she said. That was double the 2007 attendance, which doubled 2006 attendance.

"One reason that it's popular is that it goes along with the local food trend," she said. "You know what you're feeding them and where (the eggs) are coming from, and they're fresh."

The eggs also taste better and are better for you, Corey said. Large, bright-orange, protein-filled yolks are found in eggs that come in a variety of colors, depending on a chicken's breed.

"I think owning chickens is great," she said. "And the taste of fresh eggs compared to store eggs, it actually just tastes like an egg instead of tasting like nothing."

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