Can Chickens Eat Watermelon? Yes. Watermelon Soup with Mint Hits the Spot
Learn How to Keep Chickens Cool in Extreme Heat

Reading Time: 4 minutes
Can chickens eat watermelon? Yes. They love it! You can feed it to them directly by cutting open the melon and letting them feast. Or you can get fancy. Cooling Watermelon Soup with Mint is one of my favorite hydrating summertime treats for my flock.
While many chicken keepers worry about their chickens being too cold in the winter, what they should really be concerned about is their chickens overheating in the summer. Chickens don’t sweat like humans do. They expel heat from their bodies through their skin and especially through their comb. This is why the Mediterranean breeds of chickens such as the Leghorn, Andalusian, Penedesenca, and Minorca have extremely large combs.
Believe it or not, chickens are most comfortable in temperatures between 45 and 65 degrees F or so and when the mercury starts to rise, they will begin to show clear signs of heat stress. When the temperatures rise above 80 degrees F you will notice your chickens begin to hold their wings out from their bodies. This is to allow cool air to pass under their wings and allow body heat to escape. They will begin panting. This is another way chickens stay cool. It’s similar to dogs.
In the warm months, there are several things you can do to help alleviate heat stress. Providing lots of shady areas, a well-ventilated coop and cool, fresh water are essential. Chickens don’t like to drink warm water, so adding some ice cubes to the waterers or frozen water bottles will help to keep the water cool longer. I like to set out shallow tubs of water for my chickens. I’ve found they like to stand in the tubs and they like to dunk their heads into the water to cool and wet their combs. Interestingly, their combs essentially act as radiators, giving off excess body heat.
While knowing how to keep chickens cool in extreme heat involves techniques like providing shade and ice water, I like to take it one step further and make watermelon soup for my chickens. Before you ask yourself, can chickens eat watermelon, I can assure you that watermelon is one of my girls’ favorite treats. They are perfectly happy if I just cut a melon in half and let them have at it — they’ll eat the flesh, seeds and even the rind! In fact, the entire watermelon plant is edible for your chickens, so once you’ve harvested your crop, let them eat the stalks and leaves as well.
Cooling Watermelon Soup with Mint
Ingredients:
One watermelon of any size halved and insides scooped out
Handful of ice cubes
Handful of fresh mint, plus more for garnish
Using a blender or food processor, purée the watermelon flesh, seeds, ice and mint until smooth. Pour the soup evenly into each watermelon half. Garnish with additional mint leaves.
Serve the watermelon soup on a hot day in a shady spot. If your chickens are like mine, they will finish off the watermelon soup and then eat right down to the green rind. If you leave the rind for them, they’ll usually eat that too! If not, I like to keep filling the empty rind with ice water for them to drink.
Keeping your chickens cool in the summer is extremely critical. If you do notice signs of heat exhaustion in a flock member (a hen lying on the ground, extremely labored breathing, eyes closed, very pale comb and wattles, lethargy, etc.), immediately get her somewhere cool and soak her feet and legs in a tub of cool water to bring her body temperature down. You don’t want to submerge the whole body — wetting a chicken’s feathers renders her unable to regulate her body temperature herself. Give her cool water to drink and some homemade electrolytes, plain Pedialyte or even Gatorade in a pinch, for added nutrients to replace what she has lost. And even if you aren’t interested in taking the time to make my Cooling Watermelon Soup with Mint, offering your chickens chilled watermelon slices in the summer will be greatly appreciated.
When you started raising chickens, did you wonder can chickens eat watermelon? Do you feed your chickens watermelon in the summer, in hot weather? Let us know in the comments below.
I do feed my girls watermelon and I’m going to try your soup. My girls also love strawberries, grapes, blueberries, and tomatoes and cucumbers to name a few.
Thanks for the soup recipe and will let you know how my girls like it.
My girls are three to four weeks old. Is it safe to start giving them watermelon, or other table scraps?
Mine LOVE watermelon. We buy 1 for us and 3 (1 ripe, 2 need time to ripen more) more for them when I catch them at a good price. They get 1 per week. I also buy them cantaloupe. I shop manager special fresh foods for my chickens and ducks all year.
My chickens love watermelon too. Another thing I do to help keep them cool, besides the watermelon and ice water, is to just run the hose on the ground for them. They will drink the cold water and stand in puddles. I have a hose stuck through the fence to their yard. When they see me, they come running because they know I will run the hose. Also, my cabbage is planted nearby so they know they will get a couple of cabbage leaves! No, they are not spoiled!
My ladies love their watermelon! I also make them coleslaw rings – easy to make: mix coleslaw and water and freeze. They enjoy all day. I have also included in their run area a small kiddie pool that I put water in for them to just wander. I have a cinder block set in the middle so it doesn’t blow away and they have an “island” in the middle…lol
My chicken picken would thank you for your insight if they could.So here i am thanking you, yours truely senor chicken
picken guy!
I’ve purchased 6 watermelons so far this year. Only two were really good for me to eat. Being the only human in my family my chickens have enjoied any part I didn’t. The first one I cut in half length wise. The birds cleaned everything out of the shell. The next morning when I was out to open their chicken house, I noticed one of the shell halves upside down. To my surprise when I turned it over a captured hen came out from under it. From then on I’ve cut them in quarters.
I’ve also learned to turn other things open end up to release any one captured before bedtime.
Life on a farm really is a “Funny Farm “