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. We are closed during the day from Mondays to Fridays.

On Saturdays we are open from 11am to dusk.

We are closed on SUNDAYS and BANK HOLIDAYS.

Boarding in and out is after 6.30 each weekday evening and after 11am on Saturdays.

Boarding

We have indoor and outdoor hutches for Rabbits and Guinea Pigs, just bring your pet and we do the rest. We even store your carry cage until your return.

Pets with their own portable cage such as Hamsters, Rats, Mice, Gerbils, Degus, Chinchilas, Budgies and Parrots come in their cages and live in the dining room. We can also accomodate chickens and reptiles (not together).

We provide all the food and bedding your pets need during their stay with us. Use the contact button at the bottom of the page to check availability.

read more

Incubators for Sale

We have ex-hire Smart incubators for sale. They are fully automatic and are in good working order. They are £100 each.

Cream Legbar Fertile Eggs

We have fertile Cream Legbar eggs for sale at £1 each. Email to check availability.

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 > Mud Management > Looking after rubber chippings

Looking after rubber chippings

Here are some tips for keeping your pen fresh and the rubber chippings as good as new. The rubber is solid, which makes it hygienic as it does not absorb any element of the chicken poo that lands on it, but they do absorb heat, making them dry off quickly and very pleasant for the chickens to walk on and bathe in.

However, the rubber chippings do need looking after regularly as chickens produce a huge amount of poo! Poo is water soluble and regular hosing down will keep the rubber chippings free moving and clean. An ordinary hose is best as pressure washers tend to spray the chippings everywhere and splash the poo all around as well.

When you lay the mesh and the rubber chippings down, provide ahead for a drain to allow the poo dissolved water out of the pen. If the water cannot drain out it will slowly drain down through the mesh and leave the poo behind, much where it was in the first place. Water runs naturally downhill, so if there is any slope on the pen at all, use it to help the hose water drain away. If not, then scrape a section of rubber chippings away from a corner before you start using the hosepipe and push them back afterwards. Or it might just be the case of propping the corner of the run on a brick to let the water run out and then taking the brick away again.

If poo is allowed to build up there will be two different consequences, depending on the weather.

With long dry spells the poo can harden in the sun and the chippings can become matted together. All is not lost if this happens as the rubber chippings are solid and so have not absorbed any of the poo. Although the chippings appear to be matted together, one good hosing down should loosen the hard bits and started to soften them. A second go with the hose should produce better results. If not, the matted area will just be a top layer and should lift off in lumps, leaving clean chippings underneath. Break the matted lumps up and soak them in a bucket and the poo will eventually soften up enough to release its hold on the chippings. Once the chippings are free, pour the poo water in the bucket on any area of the garden that need fertilising!

In wet weather a build up of poo can start to smell. If you get a Miracle Grow attachment for the hose and fill the bottle with Jeyes fluid or Barrier V1 instead of Miracle Grow you can dial up the concentration of disinfectant as you hose the chippings down and that will stop any unpleasant smell dead.

However, prevention is much better than cure. Regular hosing down will keep the run clean and fresh.

Meat Chicken Keeper Book

The much anticipated Meat Chicken Keeper Book is published and available. It covers all aspects from raising chicks to eating the final product. There are full colour photos throughout describing the step by step details of killing humanely, plucking, gutting, boning and how to truss a chicken. The same techniques can be use on turkeys, so be prepared for Christmas and raise a turkey of your own!

Meat Chicken Keeper is written to be read through and also be used as a reference book. it will give you the confidence to take control of the chicken you eat.

The book is £9.99 with only £1 p&p if you want it posted. To order please send a cheque for £10.99, payable to Hook Farm, to A Wilson, Hook Farm, London Rd, Hook RG27 9EQ and we will post the book as fast as possible.