
Saturday, May 30, 2026
Domestic chickens are arguably the underdogs of the pet world. Tiny chicks need coddling until they’re fully feathered and able to keep themselves warm. After that, they’re turned loose in an enclosure—or allowed to free-range. The point of keeping chickens, of course, is getting eggs. There’s little as pleasing as farm-fresh eggs—standing up in a skillet, smiling, and, by most accounts, tasting better.
I could babble on about fresh eggs, but my real purpose here is to talk chickens—or rather, one chicken. Specifically, a single hen.
A Welsummer was her breed, and “Welsummer” became the name I casually gave the little chick who joined my first flock back in 2010. I purchased her, along with two bantam chicks, when they were about two days old. They had been placed in a “sick tank” at the feed store and needed special care. I paid 50 cents apiece for them.
I remember wondering, “What’s a Welsummer?” I later learned it is a Dutch breed of mixed ancestry, developed in farmyards during the early twentieth century.
At home, I found an unused terrarium, added bedding, rigged an overhead heat lamp, and settled the tiny chicks inside. As small as Welsummer was, the bantams were even smaller. What I witnessed was lovely. Each bantam hopped over to Welsummer and tucked itself beneath one of her wings. There she stood—patient, accepting, and hardly bigger than the chicks she sheltered.
I was looking at a chicken, and yet, was mightily impressed. I never forgot such kindness. That trio’s behavior continued until the babies grew stronger and more confident. Eventually, all three joined the larger flock.
Fast forward about ten years. By then, every member of my original flock was gone except Welsummer, who still wandered the enclosure. I brought home a new batch of chicks, raised them until they were feathered, and then turned them loose with the old hen. That was before I understood the importance of properly introducing unfamiliar chickens.
The youngsters and Welsummer were not going to get along.
Welsummer had outlived a great many chickens, and I wanted her safe. So I moved her into a special pen with a heat lamp inside my attached garage. There she would remain protected for as long as she lived.
That was nearly six years ago.
Sadly, yesterday, Welsummer—once the kindest little chick I had ever known, and later my beloved special pet—crossed the Rainbow Bridge.

She was turning sixteen years old. A remarkably long life for a chicken.
— Diana