Read To Walk a Pagan Path: Practical Spirituality for Every Day Online
Authors: Alaric Albertsson
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started to produce fewer eggs. A chicken lays best for the first f 175 2
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couple of years, and then begins to slow down. The good
news is that a hen continues to lay throughout her life, so an
older hen may suit you if you do not care how many eggs she
is giving you.
The advantage of beginning with pullets or hens are (1)
they are much more hardy than chicks, (2) you do not need
to invest in a brooder and heat lamp, (3) they will begin lay-
ing eggs now instead of months from now, and (4) you can
be absolutely sure that they are females.
After you’ve decided whether you want chicks or pul-
lets, you will need to decide on what breed or breeds you
are interested in. Your selection will be limited by what is
available near you, so it is a good idea to have more than one
breed in mind. If there are several breeds you like, and all are available near you, there is no reason why you cannot have
more than one breed of chicken. The hens do not really care;
to a chicken every chicken is just another chicken.
If you live in a warm or mild climate, nothing beats the
Leghorn for egg production. These are small, light birds, so
they consume less feed-per-egg than other breeds. Those
white eggs you buy at the supermarket almost always come
from Leghorns. Because they are light birds, Leghorns
are more likely to fly over a fence than heavier breeds, so a
roofed enclosure is advised. Leghorns also do not fare as well
as other breeds in colder climates.
For brown eggs, some of the best layers are Rhode Island
Reds and the Rocks: Plymouth Rocks, Barred Rocks, Par-
tridge Rocks. The Rocks are differentiated by the color of
their plumage. All of these are very good layers and tend to
be friendly birds. The hens that I now have in my back yard
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are three Rhode Island Reds who I have named Henny, Penny
and Jenny. They are always excited to see me, and this spring
they were each giving me almost one egg every single day.
I have mentioned the Sex Link hens, which come in both
Red and Black varieties. These are also said to be good layers
of brown eggs. The Black Sex Link lays a slightly darker egg.
If you can find one, an Araucana hen is a somewhat cau-
tious bird, but a good layer. The interesting thing about this
breed is that it produces blue-green “Easter eggs”.
There are seemingly countless breeds to choose from, but
the ones I have mentioned are some of the best for a small
backyard flock. In addition to standard sized chickens there
are bantam chickens, which are smaller and lighter. I have
not mentioned them here because their care is almost iden-
tical to that of larger hens. Because of their size and light weight, a roofed enclosure is very important and they will
fare better in mild or warm climates.
Once you have your pullets—whether you raised them
from chicks or purchased young layers—caring for them is
simple. Like any animal, they need fresh, clean water every
day. Feeding and watering your hens is no more bothersome
than feeding and watering a couple of canaries or finches.
For food I recommend high protein layer pellets. I add a little cracked corn, but this is not necessary. The important thing
is that your chickens have access to fresh grass and bugs to
supplement the feed you give them. When your birds eat
grass and bugs, and lay eggs, and you eat those eggs, you take
the essence of the land around you into your own body. You
become one with the world.
As an added bonus, the grass and bugs are free.
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Other than feeding and watering your chickens, the only
other routine task you will have is cleaning out the henhouse.
This needs to be done once a week and will take about as
long as cleaning a bird cage. A pair of rubber gloves will
make this much more pleasant. Before first releasing your
birds into the coop, you will want to put absorbent bedding
in the nest boxes and on the floor of the henhouse. This can
be either straw or shredded wood chips. Each week you will
need to remove all of this (now mixed with chicken poop)
and replace it with clean bedding.
If you also have a garden for herbs or vegetables, clean-
ing the chicken coop will be a task you will not mind at all.
The Earth Mother loves poop, and you will come to love it,
too. Well, maybe you will not love it, but you will appreci-
ate it. The dirty bedding you remove from the henhouse is
the raw material that can transform your garden into a fer-
tile paradise.
First the dirty bedding must be composted. Chicken
poop has a high nitrogen content and will burn your plants
if applied directly to the soil. Composting is just a polite way of saying “making things rot”. A compost pile can be as simple as a mound of organic material. My grandfather used to
compost his grass clippings in this way, but he had plenty of
space for piles of grass clippings and was not in any hurry.
The rotting takes place at the center of the pile, so compost-
ing goes much faster if you can turn it occasionally and get
all of the material into the center.
I use a composting drum. These are very convenient, but
they are expensive to purchase. If money is an issue, it will
cost much less to build a square 3’ by 3’ bin out of used lum-
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ber. The bin does not need a bottom; four walls to contain
the compost is sufficient. Every week or so you will need to
turn the compost with a gardening fork. (With a composting
drum you just turn the crank and the whole drum rolls over.)
Put all of the dirty bedding into the compost bin. The
straw or shredded wood will rot along with the poop. Also
add any weeds you pull from your garden and any vegeta-
ble scraps from the kitchen. All of this will decompose and
blend together to become the magical ingredient that will
cause your garden to flourish. Spread the compost over your
garden in the autumn, tilling or digging it into the soil. A second application can be added in the spring before you begin
planting.
Beginning around the age of five months, your pullets
will begin laying eggs. If your birds have access to grass and bugs, you will probably notice that their eggs taste significantly better than “store bought” eggs.
I have been asked at what age a hen stops laying. The
answer is that she does not. After a few years an older hen
will lay noticeably fewer eggs, but she will continue to pro-
duce throughout her life.
EGG DIVINATION
With your own eggs, you can practice one of the oldest forms
of divination. It is a practice known variously as oomantia,
ovamancy, oloscopy or oomancy; divination with eggs. Some
people try this with eggs purchased from the supermarket,
but what significance does an egg like that have? You do not
know when it was laid, or where it came from. It is rather
like trying to construct an astrological chart without know-
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ing a person’s date or place of birth. When you collect an egg
from a nest box, you know exactly when and where it was
laid. When you hold the egg laid by one of your own chick-
ens, you hold that moment in time and space when it came
into the world.
The ancients had different techniques for practicing div-
ination with eggs, but the method most commonly used
today involves the interpretation of the shape that the white
of the egg takes when poured into water. To do this, heat a
cauldron with fresh water. If you do not have a cauldron, any
contemporary cooking pot will suffice. That is what a caul-
dron is, after all; a medieval pot.
Select an egg laid that same day, and pray to a god or god-
dess of your spiritual path for guidance. I pray to Woden
who is a master of divination and magic among the Saxon
deities. After your prayer, carefully break open the egg and
separate the white from the yolk.
Remove the cauldron from the fire or stove. The water
should be hot, but not boiling. Slowly pour the egg white
into the water. The white will of course be clear when you
pour it, but will quickly become white (which is why it is
called the “white”) and take on shapes as it cooks in the hot
water. Like cumulus clouds on a summer’s day, some of the
shapes will remind you of objects or creatures. Ignore mean-
ingless wisps of egg white and note only those shapes that
seem to resemble something.
Egg divination is like crystal gazing in that it is extreme-
ly subjective. A shape may mean one thing to you and some-
thing entirely else to another person, and the same shape
may mean different things to you at different times. The
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shape of a serpent, for example, could mean danger (if you
are afraid of snakes), or renewal (because a snake emerg-
es from its old skin) or good health (especially for Hellen-
ic Pagans, for whom the snake is a symbol of healing). The
shape of a hammer could equally represent either construc-
tion or destruction, because a hammer can be used to build
something or to break something apart. When you note a
significant shape, consider what that shape means to you
at
that very moment
.
What you do with the leftover yolk is your own business.
If the omen was good, you may want to cook the yolk and
eat it, taking the blessing into yourself. Obviously you do not want to do this if the omen was not so good.
NECTAR OF THE GODS
Keeping two or three chickens is easy, but it does require a
few minutes from you each day. If you want to go out of
town, even for a weekend, you will need to make arrange-
ments for somebody to feed and water your chickens, and
collect the eggs. If this is more than what you want to com-
mit yourself to, there is another animal even easier to keep
that can connect you with the earth’s cycles. No “livestock”
of any kind demands less attention than the honeybee!
As with chickens, many municipalities permit residents to
keep a hive of honeybees. Amateur beekeepers can be found
in some of our largest cities.
You might be thinking, “But they are creepy bugs!” Yes,
and they are creepy bugs that can sting you. For this reason
if no other, it is a good idea to take a beekeeping class before getting actively involved in this hobby. There is nothing intui-f 181 2
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tive (from our human perspective) about insect behavior. You
know what it means when a dog snarls, but can you tell what
a honeybee is likely to do? When a chicken is sick you will
usually notice that something is wrong, however, without
some basic education, you can stare at an entire hive of dying
bees and think they are doing fine.
Why keep bees? There are a few excellent reasons:
• Honey. (We might as well start with the obvious.) If you
brew mead—a fermented honey wine—there is noth-
ing so nice as using your own honey. Jars of your honey
also make great Yuletide presents for coven members,
co-workers and friends.
• Beeswax. The caps from your honeycomb can be saved
when you collect your honey. These can be melted
down and made into ritual candles (a subject we will be
discussing in a later chapter).
• To connect with the earth’s cycles. Beekeeping is yet
another way to sharpen your awareness of the world
around you. Although bees are very low maintenance,
you may need to provide them with water during a
drought. You will look forward to warm, sunny days
when it is easiest to approach the hive. Every change
in the environment will take on deeper significance for
you.
• Pollination. Fruit trees and many other flowering plants
need bees to help carry their pollen from flower to flow-
er.
• Entertainment. Keeping a hive of bees is much like
owning a miniature city! The more you learn about
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your bees, the more you will come to appreciate them.
Each bee in your “city” will have her own duties. Some
will be responsible for comb construction, while others
will manufacture beeswax. Some will air condition the
hive in the summer, others will care for the young and
still others will stand guard duty at the hive entrance.
Although bees need very little attention, you may find
yourself “checking the hive” just for the fun of seeing
what your bees are up to.
• A beekeeper can be the life of any party. For most peo-
ple, beekeeping is an exotic and interesting subject. It is
sort of like being an astronaut or a rock star, but with
far less work.
By keeping a hive of bees you can have a complex and
thriving matriarchy in your own back yard. Your mini-me-
tropolis can have a population exceeding fifty thousand