Wednesday, June 17, 2009

CITY COULD COVET CUTE CLUCKERS

What Is Campbell River Missing that Victoria, Burnaby, New Westminister, New York, Seattle and Portland, plus countless other cities already have? Local resident, Connie Thiessen knows. The answer is a bylaw allowing residents to raise chickens on their property. In her letter to council, from which she has given me permission to quote…” In a time of economic stress when we are urged to grow our own food and buy locally, the lack of a chicken bylaw eliminates most residents from utilizing one way of maintaining a locally grown and inexpensive ‘green’ diet. Chickens love vegetable scraps. What better way to compost than by turning your scraps into quality protein”.

Thiessen pointed out that recently a neighbour complained to a by-law reinforcement person regarding her friend’s chicken coop which is within city boundaries, alleging that it was attracting rats. “Granted, rats are in the area” states Thiessen “but living close to the water, rats are a fact of life here and other neighbours have stated they’ve been trapping rats long before my friend’s four lovely hens arrived. These hens are now due to be destroyed within a week or so and our family and neighbours will mourn the loss of the best eggs available.” The four hens produce four eggs a day.

She continues “Hens are not noisy. Roosters are. They nearly purr with happiness when you feed them the leftover lettuce shavings. They cluck sweetly in the morning around 9am and like to brag about having laid an egg. “ Thiessen is calling for city council to formulate a bylaw ensuring a clean, humane, liveable policy to provide residents with a rewarding way of feeding their families. Another resident, Helen Sikora, contacted me to see if I had any “pull” with council. What I can do is join with both ladies in urging council to seriously consider the request. So…what do you say Mayor Charlie and councilors. We need some warm and fuzzy good news lately and permission for a couple of warm, fuzzy chickens could be the perfect antidote. As an after thought what about a “stay of proceedings” on the imminent death sentence of the four cute cluckers who were recently served with their papers?

Life In An East Facing Condo on the waterfront has its benefits but the downside is the icy cold north wind that has been blowing almost daily. However, my tubs of vegetable greens are thriving on the deck and I have been harvesting every day since early May to create crisp, intensely green salads. I snip off the outer leaves of kale, butter and leafy lettuce, chives, arugula, chard and a mix of herbs. Toss in a few leaves from the basil on the window sill, a couple of tomatoes and tiny chunks of goat cheese and I’m as happy as a rabbit on a golf course. The greens are all cool weather cruciferous plants and reproduce so quickly that I have enough salad fixings to share with the neighbours. Keep your basil indoors until we get some consistent warm days and remember to snip that wonderful plant from the top down so as to force the growth.

A Composter Small Enough To Tuck under the kitchen sink sounds like a solution for those of us in small spaces. My cousin Bridget, who lives in Kyoto, wrote to tell about her and companion Tad’s recent experience with a Bokashi Composter. It’s a small bucket with a lid and a spigot at the base of the container. They toss in kitchen waste including leftover cooked food and sprinkle it with something called EMBran which is a decomposing agent.
In about 10 days it produces a nutrient rich liquid which is drained off through the spigot. It can be used as a powerful liquid fertilizer and the remains of the compost can be spaded into your soil. They keep two buckets on the go. Their neighbor has been using this system for a year and says everything is growing much bigger and tastier than past crops. Bridget is raving about the Bokashi. You’ll find lots of info regarding this system on the internet and there is a Vancouver contact which should show up in the search.