My son was 13 when he said he wanted chickens. Dad showed him how to frame a house by building a coop. At the height of his chicken days he had 90 chickens and would deliver eggs on his bike and to customers after Mass on Sunday morning. I even called him out of school to pick up 25 new chickens. He is grown and working now. We were without chicks for a while, then I incubated eggs in my pre k classroom April of 2025. I now take care of three hens and a rooster. This past school we hatched out 4 eggs, I think I have 2 hens and 2 roosters😳
DC may have laws about keeping farm animals. However, is the VP’s residence part of DC or is it federal property? Are there any federal regulations against it? So I asked Grok:
The VP mansion (Number One Observatory Circle) is located on the grounds of the U.S. Naval Observatory in northwest Washington, D.C., and it is federal property under U.S. Navy jurisdiction.023
It sits on a secure, restricted military installation (Naval Support Facility Naval Observatory / NSF USNO), which the Navy operates. While it’s geographically in D.C., the property is federally owned and controlled, similar to other federal enclaves or military bases.3841
DC Laws on Farm Animals
D.C. has strict regulations on keeping chickens/fowl in residential areas, but they generally do not apply here. DC Health (under DCMR Title 24, Chapter 9) requires permits for fowl, with very restrictive setbacks: coops must be at least 50 feet from any building used for human habitation and 250 feet from property lines (or obtain written consent from all neighbors within 100 feet). Only hens are typically allowed in residential zones; no commercial use; and there have been enforcement actions and past attempts to further restrict or ban backyard chickens.1314
These local rules primarily govern private property within D.C. proper and do not override federal jurisdiction on military/federal enclave property.
Federal Property and Rules on Farm Animals
As federal (Navy) property, local D.C. zoning/animal ordinances do not directly control it. Federal installations like this often follow their own policies, military regulations, or federal guidelines rather than local municipal codes. There is no broad federal prohibition on keeping chickens or similar small livestock at government residences or military housing, though individual installations set rules (e.g., via base commanders or housing policies) for things like pets, waste management, security, or nuisance issues.61
• The Vance family recently installed a custom, architecturally matching chicken coop (donated, no taxpayer cost) with a dozen chicks at the residence. It has been publicly reported and promoted without any noted legal challenges, suggesting it complies with applicable rules for the site.5152
• Military housing policies (e.g., Army or joint-base examples) often allow or regulate domestic animals but may restrict exotics, aggressive breeds, or farm animals in certain contexts for health/sanitation reasons. Chickens are sometimes treated more permissively in practice, especially for family/educational purposes on larger grounds like the Observatory’s ~73 acres.62
In short: The mansion is on federal Navy property in D.C., so D.C.‘s strict backyard chicken rules don’t govern it. Federal/military authorities set the standards, and the installed coop indicates no prohibiting rules are being violated. This aligns with the site’s secure, spacious, and somewhat rural-feeling grounds compared to typical urban lots.
Nothing like starting the day with farm fresh eggs! Happy for them.
Very nice.
He can trade his excess for honey with Trump.
Kek
Up next Rubio will have to put up a catfish pond.
He could be starting a trend. Others might do the same.
I can almost see it. Hey neighbor would you like to trade some eggs for some honey?
👍 MAHA
Kids think gathering eggs and feeding the chickens is cool. I know I did. Both my Grandparents had chickens.
My son was 13 when he said he wanted chickens. Dad showed him how to frame a house by building a coop. At the height of his chicken days he had 90 chickens and would deliver eggs on his bike and to customers after Mass on Sunday morning. I even called him out of school to pick up 25 new chickens. He is grown and working now. We were without chicks for a while, then I incubated eggs in my pre k classroom April of 2025. I now take care of three hens and a rooster. This past school we hatched out 4 eggs, I think I have 2 hens and 2 roosters😳
Just waiting for the so-called self-appointed "elites" to declare how déclassé that is of a sitting VP.
DC may have laws about keeping farm animals. However, is the VP’s residence part of DC or is it federal property? Are there any federal regulations against it? So I asked Grok:
The VP mansion (Number One Observatory Circle) is located on the grounds of the U.S. Naval Observatory in northwest Washington, D.C., and it is federal property under U.S. Navy jurisdiction.023 It sits on a secure, restricted military installation (Naval Support Facility Naval Observatory / NSF USNO), which the Navy operates. While it’s geographically in D.C., the property is federally owned and controlled, similar to other federal enclaves or military bases.3841 DC Laws on Farm Animals D.C. has strict regulations on keeping chickens/fowl in residential areas, but they generally do not apply here. DC Health (under DCMR Title 24, Chapter 9) requires permits for fowl, with very restrictive setbacks: coops must be at least 50 feet from any building used for human habitation and 250 feet from property lines (or obtain written consent from all neighbors within 100 feet). Only hens are typically allowed in residential zones; no commercial use; and there have been enforcement actions and past attempts to further restrict or ban backyard chickens.1314 These local rules primarily govern private property within D.C. proper and do not override federal jurisdiction on military/federal enclave property. Federal Property and Rules on Farm Animals As federal (Navy) property, local D.C. zoning/animal ordinances do not directly control it. Federal installations like this often follow their own policies, military regulations, or federal guidelines rather than local municipal codes. There is no broad federal prohibition on keeping chickens or similar small livestock at government residences or military housing, though individual installations set rules (e.g., via base commanders or housing policies) for things like pets, waste management, security, or nuisance issues.61 • The Vance family recently installed a custom, architecturally matching chicken coop (donated, no taxpayer cost) with a dozen chicks at the residence. It has been publicly reported and promoted without any noted legal challenges, suggesting it complies with applicable rules for the site.5152 • Military housing policies (e.g., Army or joint-base examples) often allow or regulate domestic animals but may restrict exotics, aggressive breeds, or farm animals in certain contexts for health/sanitation reasons. Chickens are sometimes treated more permissively in practice, especially for family/educational purposes on larger grounds like the Observatory’s ~73 acres.62 In short: The mansion is on federal Navy property in D.C., so D.C.‘s strict backyard chicken rules don’t govern it. Federal/military authorities set the standards, and the installed coop indicates no prohibiting rules are being violated. This aligns with the site’s secure, spacious, and somewhat rural-feeling grounds compared to typical urban lots.
This news evolved some great chicken coup memes.
He's a chicken tender! Just like me! I love my tiny flock!
I mean yeah but... MSRP for the workin folk?
I looked through some of the nicer ones, his looks custom with the rounded house. I'd say mid 20s to 30k.
That's absolutely insane!
They are beautiful. They come as a kit and need to be assembled.