We are home to a small flock of free-ranging chickens. Our spacious coop has been designed with distinct areas to accommodate our spring chicks & our mature laying hens and roosters. The coop also has pop-out doors, allowing the flock to be rotated between the three yards, taking advantage of fresh vegetation for their foraging during the growing season. Members of our flock are free to enjoy fresh air and sunshine whenever they choose.
Our hens lay, on average, one egg a day and are collected every afternoon by our farmers, then washed and sold in the Dairy Annex. The egg color will depend on the breed of chicken – our flock consists of white and brown, and over the years we’ve even been home to layers of light blue eggs!
Although fed grain daily, chickens love fresh greens, so summer is their favorite time of year. After working in the vegetable gardens, the farm staff frequently treat the chickens to a pile of weeds, and they couldn’t be happier!
Our flock is an educational asset for our school field trip programs, birthday parties, summer camp, and family farm chore programs- everyone loves to help collect the eggs!
We typically have a variety of up to three to four different breeds (with a different breed added each spring!)
Red Stars are rusty red, with white. Added to our flock in 2023, these have been mixed in with the adults and have started producing eggs.
Pronounced Oss-tra-lorp are black with shiny green highlights to their feathers, and they produce brown eggs.
A strong dual purpose breed, chosen for their longevity and health, as well as their gentle disposition and excellent egg-laying abilities.
This beautiful heritage breed can be traced back to the breed known as Orpingtons, originally bred in the village of the same name in Kent, England by William Cook in the 1880s and is listed as “recovering” by the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy Conservation.
Introduced to North America in the 1920s.
101 Marchant Rd West, Redding, CT 06896
Phone: (203) 938-2117
Email: info@newpondfarm.org
Learning Center Hours: 9 AM-5 PM
Dairy Annex Hours: 7 AM – 7 PM
© 2025 New Pond Farm Education Center, All Rights Reserved. Website by Social Graces Communications.
An Avian Success Story: In the early 1900s European Starlings and English Sparrows were introduced into the northeast. For decades, these aggressive cavity nesters out-competed the more docile bluebirds for nest sites, so their populations were in serious decline. Environmental groups and individuals came to the rescue. Wooden nesting boxes were installed throughout the area and thankfully the Bluebirds proved to be quite adaptable, successfully raising their families in these new homes.
As you walk through our lower pastures and wildflower meadow, you may be fortunate enough to see bluebirds sitting on our nesting boxes. The males have brilliant blue plumage on their wings and back, a rusty colored breast and sides, and white undersides. The wings and back of the females are a more subtle grayish blue.
Once you learn the warbling vocalizations of these members of the thrush family, you will hear them frequently throughout your walk.
In addition to the many insects that make up their summer diet, our bluebirds feast on the berries of native shrubs throughout the fall and winter. We have planted stands of native winterberries (Ilex verticillate) and flowering dogwoods (Cornus florida) to add to our native staghorn sumacs (Rhus typina), and elderberries (Sambucus nigra).
Another bird that DEEP considers a species of special concern is the Purple Martin. Once commonly seen flying over open agricultural lands across the State, these aerial acrobats have been in decline for decades due to lack of open fields and pastures, lack of suitable nesting sites, and competition from aggressive non-native European starlings and house sparrows
For several decades, conservation efforts have been in place across the State to bring back the Purple Martins, and efforts are paying off! Arrangements of specially-sized, artificial hollow gourds have been hung from tall poles in appropriate habitats. Groups like the CT Audubon Society have well established banding programs, and DEEP reports that the Martin populations are on the rise.
New Pond Farm’s pastures seem like a perfect habitat, so during the nesting season, we too have positioned an arrangement of hanging gourds near the white fenceline along the pasture. If you venture over here during the early morning hours in the spring, you may hear the loop of pre-recorded twittering calls that we play in an attempt to attract any migrants. So far, we have just attracted a few scouting birds. Hopefully the spring of 2024 may be our lucky year
Back in the 1980s, a pair of kestrels nested reliably in a box positioned in the large sugar maple along our Farm Road. These exquisite, robin-sized, falcons were an absolute joy to behold as they would soar, hover, and plunge over the pastures and lawns searching for insects, small mammals, amphibians, and reptiles.
For many years we have been without a nesting pair, and for the past several decades DEEP has listed American Kestrels as a species of special concern.
Working with Art Gingert, who is well known in the State for his decades of d devotion to reestablishing nesting pairs of kestrels, we have installed a kestrel box on the eastern side of our pasture. No takers yet, but the box will be back up early in the spring of 2024, and we are hopeful.