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Rescue & Adoptions

Past Featured Rescues

Buckeye Egg Farm Disaster and Rescue

On September 20, 2000, a series of tornados descended on the town of Croton, Ohio. Cutting a deadly swath through the countryside, the twisters uprooted trees, cut down power lines and blew apart homes. They also utterly destroyed several warehouse buildings belonging to the Buckeye Egg Farm, one of the largest egg factories in the world. Inside those warehouses were more than 1 million egg-laying hens confined to wire battery cages and stacked row upon row in tiers. For them, there was no warning that the tornadoes were coming and no chance of escape. When the buildings' sides and roofs blew down, the cages were mangled and many birds were instantly killed, but most were trapped helplessly without access to food, water or veterinary attention.

Upon hearing of the egg farm disaster, Farm Sanctuary staff and volunteers, along with staff from OohMahNee Sanctuary in Pennsylvania, contacted Buckeye Egg Farm and successfully persuaded the company to allow the hens to be rescued and brought to animal sanctuaries. Both sanctuaries quickly assembled a rescue team and set out for Ohio. When they arrived, they could scarcely believe the extent of the damage the tornados had caused. Twelve of the farm's chicken warehouses had been leveled, and everywhere the rescuers turned, they could see weak, injured chickens trapped in twisted cages, languishing without food or water. Deeply saddened by what they saw, but undaunted by the task ahead of them, the rescuers began saving as many lives as they could. In the end, Farm Sanctuary helped rescue more than 3,000 hens. Some of the hens were transported to loving, adoptive homes and others were delivered safely to animal sanctuaries across the nation. Nearly 600 came to live at our New York Shelter.

Today, only a small number of the hens rescued from the Buckeye Egg Farm remain at Farm Sanctuary. Selectively bred to produce nearly 300 eggs each year -as opposed to the 60-70 they would lay in nature- and thus prone to serious reproductive illnesses, the rest have passed away. They lived beautiful, happy lives here at Farm Sanctuary, but lives that were much too short. Some suffered from cysts, infections and egg masses in their oviducts, others from ovarian carcinoma and diseases of the reproductive tract. Valued only for their production levels and pushed beyond their biological limits, the odds were against them from the very beginning.

The remaining Buckeye hens are now seven to eight years old, and some are currently receiving treatments for the same reproductive problems that claimed their friends. They are doing quite well despite their illnesses, and here at least, they have been given the chance to live and to be free. Most factory egg farms send their hens to slaughter after only 12 to 15 months in production. Had the tornados never wrought their devastation in Ohio, the lives of the unhappy Buckeye hens would still have been in mortal danger. Watching these brave, tenacious survivors dust-bathing in the sun and wandering under the blackberry bushes with their rooster friend Mayfly, we are moved with joy and gratitude for their lives. At the same time, we remember those hens killed at the Buckeye Egg Farm in 2000, and all those hens still in cages, who will never be given the chance to be who they were meant to be.

Canandaigua Chicken

Chickens Saved from School Slaughter Project



Not long ago, Andre was living in misery at a school in Canandaigua, New York, where he and 18 other chickens were being used as teaching tools in an ecology classroom unit for which students reared and slaughtered live birds. Read the story.
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