Contact Hook Farm

Hook Farm
London Road
Hook, Hampshire
RG27 9EQ

Click here for directions from Google Maps

Opening Hours

We are open weekdays in the evenings from 6.30pm to dusk. We are closed during the day from Mondays to Fridays.

At weekends we are open from 10.30am to dusk both days.

Boarding in and out is after 6.30 each weekday evening and after 11am at weekends.

Rehomes

We know that circumstances change and from time to time we get rehome chickens in. Our policy is to take hens in free and we rehome them at £5 to the new owner to cover their keep here. Unfortunately we get an overriding number of cockerels, and whilst we don't charge the new owners for them, they are usually here for a long time. We therefore charge £5 to take in a cockerel to cover our costs.

Contact us from the tab below if you are interested in taking some rehome hens or a cockerel for free, or need to find a new home for your hens.

Chickenalia

By popular demand we now have a dedicated site to all the wonderful things chicken related. You can browse and order online and pay with Paypal, or shop at the farm when you come over.

Click on the link to go to the Chickenalia site and see what we have for you! Chickenalia

Weaners available in September

We have Gloucester Old Spot piglings born on 1 July. Our piglings are weaned at 8 weeks and are then ready to go to their new homes. At 8 weeks old they are £50.

Contact us by email to alison@spottypiggies.co.uk or from the Contact button at the bottom of the page to reserve them. They are popular, so reserving one (or two or three) is best if you can.

Testimonials

29th Sep 2009

Dear Alison

Just to let you know how much we enjoyed the Chicken Keeper course yesterday. Much more inormation that we anticipated and well worth attending the course.

You were very approachable and I have no hesitation in recommending the course to any fellow chicken keepers.

Kind regards, Donna Waring

Home > Hen Houses > Lady House including Run

Lady House

The Lady House with Run £145

The Lady House and Run can be used for small poultry and measures 21 ins deep x 24 ins wide x 24 ins high. The run is 60ins long x 27 ins wide x 20 ins high. The mesh on the run is 1" square welded mesh for additional strength.

It is made from Scandinavian pine which is tongue and grooved for additional strength. The flooring is made from OSB (oil based board) which is longer lasting. It is made in the UK.

The wood is treated with an animal friendly preservative and you can choose the colour from a range.

The roof is hinged for easy access. A panel slides across the front to keep the poultry in at night within the safety of the house.

The Lady hen house will keep 2 chickens/hens or 3/4 bantams. It is also possible to buy this house with a nesting box which may alter the price slightly and may cause a delay in supply. The Lady house is also ideal for keeping a few meat chickens, which is a difficult house to find.

We have carefully selected the Lady House for ease of use, value and quality and we are sure you will agree that this hen house meets all three.

The Lady House can be bought separately for £79.

Rubber Chippings

Dear Alison,

Just to thank you again for delivering the chippings so promptly, and to say how pleased I am with the difference they've made to the run. It's gone from a rather nasty sticky, messy surface, to a lovely comfy warm, soft, well-drained and easily washable one, which will last for ever I should think, and relieve me from the backbreaking chore of removing nasty wet soiled litter in heavy buckets, not good for an asthmatic!

The 10kg. bags were a good size and shape for carrying and emptying, so the job was quite quick and easy. I'm finding that the hens' feet keep perfectly clean now I have the chippings, so the eggs don't get muddy in the boxes. Also, the drinking water stays cleaner as the chippings don't blow into it as lighter bedding tends to do. I've just invented a 'climbing frame' for the hens, consisting of a platform made from an old shed door supported about 4ft off the ground on some old scaffolding posts, with an old ladder liberated from a local builder's rubbish heap for them to climb up, before paragliding down - very exciting exercise, and a soft landing for them on the rubber.

Best wishes, Virginia Lee