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Archive for the 'Black Forest' Category

Counting chickens

December 21st, 2012, 11:14 am by

How many chickens do you own?

How about your neighbor?

Or do you get eggs at the grocery, like most folks?

Colorado Springs residents are allowed to keep 10 chickens on their property. That’s true in Fountain, too, but people with less than five acres in unincorporated parts of El Paso County can only have two chickens.

County officials haven’t addressed the chicken counting case in decades. County commissioners performed a juggling act with the topic at their Thursday meeting but won’t take action until next month.

“I’m pro chicken,” commissioner chairwoman Amy Lathen said, fighting to keep a straight face.

The county has gotten some complaints: a rooster was crowing in the Park Vista area, a neighbor’s chickens were staining the sidewalk with what chickens tend to leave behind, and some other fowl tales.

The county has chosen not to enforce the two-chicken limit for years, said Mark Gebhart, deputy director of the county’s development services department. They’ve looked the other way as long as the number of cluckers was 10 or less.

Commissioners didn’t discuss how many chickens to allow but will in January. They did agree that roosters shouldn’t be allowed on properties less than five acres.

“Commissioners want to make it formal,” Gebhart said. “They’ll get into what is common sense for this.”

Only three Saturdays left to get free mulch

September 7th, 2011, 8:56 am by

It’s time to start thinking about preparing your trees, flowers and vegetable gardens for fall. And there are just a few weeks left to get free mulch made from donated slash materials.  

Mulch will be available from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the next three Saturdays: Sept. 10, 17, and 24, at the Black Forest slash/mulch site,  located on the east side of Herring Road, just south of Shoup Road between Black Forest and Vollmer roads.

The program will close for the season Sept. 24 at 4 p.m. No slash will be accepted after Sept. 11.

Mulching helps protect trees and plants during winter and conserves moisture. As mulch decomposes, it forms topsoil, so residents also can store mulch over the winter for use in the spring.  

Slash is the residue left from cutting and trimming trees, pine cones, limbs and needles. The slash/mulch program accepts only tree and brush debris and does not take stumps, roots, weeds, grass, lumber or trash.

Hand-loaded mulch is offered for free. Mulch that is loaded for pick up is $4 per bucket.

The site is open to residents of El Paso and Teller counties and is run by volunteers as a wildfire mitigation and recycling program. Sponsors are the El Paso County Environmental Division, the Colorado Forestry Association and the Black Forest Fire Department, in cooperation with the Colorado State Forest Service and the State Board of Land Commissioners.

For more information, go to www.bfslash.org.