Life On Gabriola Island

Chicken Of The Woods

What do you do with the old bedding from your coop?

I used to dump it in the pen for my chickens to scratch through but I found that years of composting leaves, shavings, straw and veggies raised the soil level in my pen. My posts are cedar or metal T-posts and I discovered that the cedar ones were getting covered at the base and starting to prematurely rot.

This summer I screened many wheelbarrows of soil from my pen. The rocks went into the potholes in my long driveway and the amended soil went into the garden.

I also wanted to be proactive in bug control – old shavings provide a habitat for lice and mites and their eggs, so the plan was to remove them as far from the chickens as possible.

For the last year or so, I’ve been dumping the shavings in the woods, choosing spots that have big hollows or around rotting logs – all in the hopes that it will create inviting habitat for mushrooms, especially edibles.

I’ve twice found Morels,  Shaggy Manes and in late September I came across these – fittingly named Chicken-of-the-Woods (Laetiporus Sulphureus) – growing right at the edge of my shavings pile.

I think the reference to chicken (isn’t everything supposed to taste like chicken?) is that they maintain their firm consistency when cooked, so would be a good vegan substitute for chicken breast. And better yet, they stay that fantastic colour. You can eat them fresh, or dry or freeze them for future use.

I thank my chickens for creating such fertile material for these fantastic fungi to flourish.

September 14, 2019: I’m happy to report that my Chicken Of The Woods mushroom has come back again this year. Lots of times mushrooms don’t seem to return to the same place year after year. I’m hoping that more will come up soon and I might find an interesting way to cook them.

Chicken of the Woods 2019
Chicken of the Woods 2019

5 comments on “Chicken Of The Woods

  1. Unknown's avatar

    Is there another name for these?

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Unknown's avatar

    I’ve been lucky with Oyster mushrooms coming back for the last three years. Just found a stump that chicken of the woods grew on and hoping to find them there next year. I ended up freezing most as I didn’t want to lose any.

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  3. Unknown's avatar

    We just found 9lbs of Chicken Of The Woods. We put most the in freezer. We have found Oyster mushrooms in the same location for the past 3 years. We only get a small amount (half to one pound if we are lucky) as we can’t take all of them because we want them to come back. Now to find some recipes.

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