
Eleven million households across the U.S. now own backyard chickens, according to the American Pet Products Association. Many of them are renting chickens as a workaround to an egg shortage and higher prices.
On a recent day in Fairfax, Virginia, the McHonett family of four added two temporary members.
Charlotte McHonett, 12, is the instigator of all this. Charlotte lives with her parents, Patrick and Jessica McHonett, and her 8-year-old brother Jack in a leafy suburb outside Washington, D.C.
鈥淲e were driving home from school one day, and a podcast was talking about this company called Rent The Chicken,鈥 Charlotte said. 鈥淎nd I thought, 鈥楬ey, that would be cool to do.鈥欌

Rent The Chicken offers rentals nationwide in states such as Arizona, Colorado, Wisconsin, Texas, and Virginia. Local partners, like Glenda Crum, deliver the hens, set up the coops, and show families how to dispose of poop.
For his part in convincing his parents to rent the chickens, young Jack ran the numbers for this project. He figured out how much his family would save by eating fresh eggs produced at home, instead of from the store, and compared it to the cost of renting chickens for half a year, including one coop, two bags of feed and two chickens.
鈥淲e saved a bunch of money,鈥 Jack said, 鈥渂ecause we don鈥檛 have to buy eggs because these give us free eggs.鈥
The kids like their eggs scrambled or sunny side up. Each of the two chickens lays one egg per day, which means one egg per kid, since the parents make smoothies for breakfast.
Now, the economics of renting are getting harder as consumer egg prices start to come down. Another option for families is to build a coop from scratch and buy their own hens.
Crum set up the coop in the McHonett鈥檚 backyard. The structure is shaped like a little red barn. Open the door, and there鈥檚 a kind of upper loft space.
Like all promising ventures, there may be complications. As it turns out, Crum said, these hens will not lay eggs immediately.

鈥淚t could take up to a month,鈥 Crum said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been moved, they鈥檝e been upset, taken away from their place that they know. Like the kids, if they go to a new school, it takes time to make friends. It takes time to fit in.鈥
Then she warns of the risk to the hens鈥 safety. They can be vulnerable to predators.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e not in the backyard with them, don鈥檛 let 鈥檈m out of the coop,鈥 Crum said. 鈥淓verybody likes chicken. Hawks, fox, coyotes, eagles, they all like chicken.鈥
And then, there鈥檚 a warning from public health experts: Backyard chickens can carry bird flu.
The virus spreads through wild animals like migrating geese. It鈥檚 in their saliva and feces. If a human or a critter step in infected goose poop and walks over to the McHonett family hens, the hens could get infected.
In fact, the first person in this country to die from bird flu was exposed to a backyard flock, according to officials in Louisiana.
But there aren鈥檛 a lot of wild birds that could be carriers near Virginia, Crum said.
鈥淭he bird flu is more with wild waterfowl,鈥 Crum said. 鈥淪o, if you have a big place and you have, you know, ducks and geese landing in their pond, that鈥檚 on your property, that鈥檚 where that can kind of happen.鈥
So, the McHonett family hens are probably safe. Jack and Charlotte are lucky they even got them: The Rent the Chicken company says inquiries for their hens are five times higher than normal.
In much of the country, these fine-feathered friends are sold out.
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