Facebook Pixel Road-tripping rooster | The Country Smallholder – animals-pets – Lesen Sie diese Geschichte auf Magzter.com
Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Road-tripping rooster

The Country Smallholder

|

July 2025

When Ellie Fant first adopted a tiny Serama cockerel, she had no idea he would become her best friend and travel companion. From waterfalls to supermarkets, Fergus was not just a chicken... he was family, as told to Cara Wheeldon

- Cara Wheeldon

Road-tripping rooster

In the world of bantams, few stories are as heart-warming and unusual as that of Fergus the Serama. Small in stature but bursting with character, Fergus was more than just a pet. To Ellie Fant, a 39-year-old kennel hand from South Wales, he was a loyal sidekick, a shoulder companion, and the kind of best friend who never left her side.

Fergus did not come into Ellie’s life with fanfare or planning. He was, in her words, a rescue of convenience. “I saw someone looking for homes for cockerels for free, and I thought I could save one,” she says. It was a split-second decision that would change her life.

“He was very young when he came to me,” recalls Ellie. “He had to be rehomed, though, because he had hit the age where he started fighting with his brother.”

At first, the bond was not instant. Fergus was skittish and bratty, and Ellie did not feel an immediate connection. “I thought he did not like me to start with,” notes Ellie. “But in the first week of having him, he ran into the neighbour’s field, where we lost him for an entire week!” It was not until later, when Ellie heard noises from the field, that she ran out to find him.

“He ran up to me like, “Thank God, someone has found me,”” laughs Ellie. “From there, it was complete trust.”

That trust deepened following a traumatic fox attack that claimed the lives of Ellie’s two other cockerel Silkies. With Fergus the last bird standing, Ellie took extraordinary measures to keep him safe.

image“I put Fergus in my van, in a dog crate in the front seat,” she recalls. “He lived on my front seat for probably about three months.”

Her underlying fear was that the fox would return to the same patch of land and claim the last of her bachelors. So, in an act of preservation, Ellie decided to share her space with her small companion.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Making sure you put enough nutrition into your dairy goat to support her milk production

Sarah Day, nutritionist for Small Holder Feed offers feeding advice for your dairy goats to help them be happy, healthy and milky animals.

time to read

6 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Welcoming the very start of the spring season

Henrietta Balcon makes the most of the new crop rhubarb

time to read

2 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Starting with Pigs - before you start

Linda Aldous outlines what you need to do before anything porcine arrives on your smallholding

time to read

3 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Insurance to protect livestock - and your peace of mind

Looking ahead to a busy 2026 for Pedigree Sales, farmers and breeders will be preparing their livestock for the upcoming markets

time to read

2 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Getting Your Electric Fence Spring-Ready: Expert Q&A

As Spring arrives, it’s the perfect time to give your electric fence some attention. Based on questions we discuss regularly here at www.electricfencing.co.uk, here’s a list of the checks you should be carrying out now, and why they matter.

time to read

2 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Check your kit for the busy seasons ahead

Agricultural journalist, and machinery writer Jane Brooks, joins us for her regular look at the world.

time to read

4 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Flock together: is now the right time to add more hens?

Andy Hill explains how to integrate birds into a flock without feathers flying

time to read

4 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

The secrets behind maximising incubator hatch rates

Buying quality point of lay hens can be an expensive proposition these days (even if you can find a local source of the breed that you want). Incubating fertilised eggs can save a great deal of money and make many more breeds accessible. If you already keep poultry that includes a cockerel, an incubator means that you can hatch their eggs either to increase your flock or to sell. Hugh & Fiona Osborne have been using incubators for many years and have learned that getting a good hatch means attention to detail.

time to read

7 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

Making choices for your chicks

Victoria Roberts BVSc MRCVS says Natural and Artifical Incubation are not an either/or choice

time to read

5 mins

March 2026

The Country Smallholder

The Country Smallholder

An appetite for asparagus

Our Experts answer your questions

time to read

1 mins

March 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size