Yes! So long as there is balance. You do not want a herd of 50 sheep to one or two chickens, likewise you do not want a flock of 50 birds to one or two sheep. The important thing here is balance. Letting your chickens roam in your sheep pasture is a great way to keep flies down! The chickens scratch the dirt looking for weed seeds, grubs and bugs. Fly larvae hatches in fecal piles left behind by any livestock, including sheep. Chickens have no qualm picking the newly hatched larvae and eggs out and thus reducing your fly population. Also, the addition of nitrogen rich chicken poop will aid in faster decomposition of sheep or any other livestock manure with the added benefit of providing nitrogen to the pasture graze crop which helps it grow faster. Win win situation. Be aware though that, you want to look at what potential parasites the two might share and determine what you are going to do to prevent anything from contaminating the other. I personally let my chickens into my goat pastures--not terribly different from sheep. A parasite that chickens and goat share is Coccidia and I make sure that is is always in check.
The geese went south for the winter and the chickens died from being the cold.
The generic name for geese, ducks, chickens and turkeys is poultry.
Cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, horses, chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys.
You can not get Geese in any Harvest Moon game. You can have Chickens and in some games Ducks, but never Geese.
Chickens can live with lots of different birds. They have been known to coexist with pigeons, guinea fowl (there have even been guinea/chicken hybrids), geese (although you have to be careful as large geese can kill chickens), and even emus. It goes without saying that they should have lots of room to run though, so they aren't all together in a crowded space.
cheese
yep
No. They are a different species.
Were geese live.
well if you have not came to a conclusion on this question it is obviously chickens i am pretty sure there are no other animals that would live in a coop other than maybe if someone owns some ducks or geese but hence the word CHICKEN COOP
Goats, sheep, chickens, geese, and ducks come in flocks.
Chickens and geese lay eggs in their nests.