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Tree-range chickens: How raising poultry in the woods of B.C. could improve food security for some communities

Raising chickens in the woods is being touted as a way to help improve the food security of First Nation communities by providing an alternative todwindling supplies oftraditional foodssuch as moose and salmon.

Forest-raised chickens could provide alternative to traditional Indigenous foods like moose, salmon

Chickens rest in the natural flora of the Hazelton region of northwest B.C. on Skeena Valley Farm. (Jennifer Bulleid/Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition)

Raising chickens in the woods is being touted as a way to help improve the food security of First Nation communities by providing an alternative todwindling supplies oftraditional foodssuch as moose and salmon.

The Regenerative Poultry Project has already produced 1,500 chickens on a small farm about 150 kilometresnortheast of Terrace, B.C., using techniques developed in Guatemala.

The idea is that the chickens are allowedto roam the woods, roosting in trees and foraging for food, mimicking the behavioursof their wild ancestors.

"Chickens actually evolved as a jungle species," said Kesia Nagata of the non-profit Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition, which is helping run the project.

"They feel happiest when covered with a canopy that they can range under. They like to forage for their food, they like to scratch under trees and they like to roost and explore with the protection of a canopy over them."

The birds aren't completely on their own, though. They live on the property of Nathan Coombs, a Gitxsan farmer who runs Skeena Valley Farm and cares for the chickens.

Coombs built a small coop for the chickens to use at night and lets them roam the land by day, rotating them to different parts of his property so they don't overgraze the land.

Proponents of the 'tree-range' technique of raising chickens say the birds feel more comfortable when they can roost and forage among trees. (Jennifer Bulleid/Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition)

"They have an acre and a half to run around and be chickens," said Coombs, who was taught how to farm by his grandfather."Eat slugs and bugs and forage and eat the plants. It's different, for sure."

Theproject is based on the work ofReginaldo Haslett-Marroquin,a farmer workingto reduce the environmental impacts of food production in the United States by popularizing what he calls the "tree-range" method of food production he learned growing up in Guatemala.

Nagata visited one of Haslett-Marroquin's farms in Minnesota to learn how it worked before bringing her ideas back to B.C., where she is interested in improving food security for First Nations and other northern communities.

She said she has spoken to elders who are concerned about the decline of other food sources, particularly salmon and moose, which were traditionally a reliable source ofprotein but are now at risk of being over-harvested.

So far, it's a success.Over the summer of 2020, Coombs and Nagata raised 1,500 chickens that were quickly distributed throughout the community.

This year, they hope to not only increase that number, but seetheir techniques picked up by other farms in the region and across the province.

"We really want to show people, our local Indigenous peoples, that we can provide our own food systems," said Coombs."We can grow our healthy, sustainable foods locally on our own reserve."

Skeena Valley Farm raised 1,500 chickens using the tree-range technique in 2020 and hopes to eventually expand to more than 4,000 a year. (Jennifer Bulleid/Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition)

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Carolina de Ryk and Daybreak North