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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Meals from scratch

Chicken coop tour helps fund slammed food bank

Stephen Gibson holds one of his flock near the chicken coop he built a year ago in Bainbridge Island, Wash.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Rachel Pritchett Kitsap Sun

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND, Wash. – So this is what the recession has come to: a tour of chicken coops on Bainbridge Island.

It was no showcase of lavish estates or spectacular gardens. Instead, the island’s recent “Tour de Coop!” was a starkly modest public look at eight of the island’s backyard chicken coops.

Long symbols of strapped times, chickens and their coops are enduring symbols of self-reliance, the good earth and the promise of never going hungry as long as there is a scritch or scratch beyond the kitchen door.

Fittingly, proceeds from the tour will go toward Helpline House, which is weathering a 30 percent hike in demand over last year for the food and social services it offers. Last month, 320 families received sustenance from Helpline’s food bank, up from 270 in June 2008 and 246 in 2007, according to Joanne Tews, Helpline’s executive director.

“It’s a weekly occurrence to have residents come in who said they never expected to be on the receiving end of Helpline. They had always been donors,” Tews said.

Longtime islander and tour organizer Jo Ann Trick wanted to raise money and give visitors inspiration to rear their own chicks and eat local. Hence, the tour was hatched.

“It’s easier than raising a dog,” Trick said.

The purchase of a ticket for the tour gave the holder a map of the coops located all over the island. After visiting the coops on their own, visitors were invited to meet up at Bay Hay for a party to toast the humble chicken.

Tour-goers were able to glimpse birds ranging from Americanas to Aracaunas, and Delawares to New Hampshires. And the coops were just as varied.

Claudia McKinstry’s coop for 20 was built intentionally crooked by a group of fine woodworkers.

“You look at it, and you can’t see it immediately. It starts shifting on you,” said McKinstry, who loves chickens so much she paints them, and her works are often displayed on the island.

When not posing, her chickens produce eggs for the family and for sale, and manure for her expansive garden.

“So I use every bit of it,” she said.

Trick says recession or no recession, she’s planning to make the island’s Tour de Coop! an annual event.

After all, there are as many as 400 of them on the island.