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  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_015
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every time you fill out a survey, you get points, which

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_002
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    Kristine and a chicken (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every tim

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_005
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken in Kristine's house (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Ev

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_012
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken in Kristine's house (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Ev

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_007
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    Kristine and chicken (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every time

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_009
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken on her sofa (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every time

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_011
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken in Kristine's house (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Ev

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_010
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken in Kristine's house (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Ev

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_014
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    One of Kristine's chickens (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_013
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    One of Kristine's chickens (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_008
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    A chicken (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every time you fill ou

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_006
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    Kristine and a chicken (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every tim

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_004
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    One of Kristine's chickens (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_003
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    One of Kristine's chickens (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE -   Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    DUK10132107_001
    FEATURE - Verücktes Huhn: Kristine Jones rettet Geflügel vor dem Schlachthaus
    Kristine and a chicken (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Savvy mum dubbed the crazy chicken lady spends
    hundreds of pounds from online questionnaires
    rescuing feathered friends from the slaughterhouse
    By Harriet Whitehead, PA Real Life
    *With video contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A savvy mum has been dubbed the crazy chicken lady after spending the hundreds of
    pounds she earns by filling out online surveys on rescuing feathered friends from the
    slaughterhouse.
    Clucking mad for a bargain, Kristine Jones, 36, estimates she makes a round £150 a
    month by completing questionnaires money she then splurges on her 17 beloved rescue
    chickens.
    The part-time play area assistant, of Colchester, Essex, is also a fan of cashback
    websites, which allow her to reclaim money all of which goes into her animal rescue pot,
    as well as covering her household expenses.
    Adding that she spends hours every day scoping out the best deals, Kristine, who has two
    daughters Rezija, 14, and Esme, six with her staff sergeant husband Mark, 50, said:
    Some months are quieter than others, but I usually make between £100 to £150 a month
    by completing marketing surveys.
    It costs me about £25 a month to keep my 17 chickens in food and bedding, and they
    reward me by giving me fresh eggs. The rest of the money I earn goes on household
    expenses.
    I have 17 chickens right now and if I had the room, I would have lots more. I would be a
    real crazy chicken lady with hundreds of them.
    Deciding to look for ways to make extra cash from home when pregnant with Esme
    around six years ago, Kristine soon discovered scores of companies willing to pay people
    to fill out marketing surveys.
    Since then, she has been spending two to three hours every day answering
    questionnaires even setting up a designated email account to ensure she never misses
    an offer.
    Giving her views on everything from brands to politics, she earns hundreds of pounds a
    year, often in the form of vouchers.
    She explained: Every tim

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Sabrina White
    DUKAS_92931244_PPR
    Sabrina White
    SONDERKONDITIONEN | SPECIAL FEE, 10/2017, Sabrina White *** Local Caption *** 00608167
    SONDERKONDITIONEN | SPECIAL FEE, Nur für redaktionelle Nutzung | For Editorial use only

     

  • FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    DUK10018194_003
    FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    Windel für Hühner in Melbourne / 250216 *** FEBRUARY 25, 2016: MELBOURNE, VIC. Kim Wilson with chickens wearing cotton nappies deigned by avian vet Phil Sacks at Burwood Bird and Anmal Hospital in Melbourne, Victoria*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 21359174
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    DUK10018194_004
    FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    Windel für Hühner in Melbourne / 250216 *** FEBRUARY 25, 2016: MELBOURNE, VIC. Kim Wilson with chickens wearing cotton nappies deigned by avian vet Phil Sacks at Burwood Bird and Anmal Hospital in Melbourne, Victoria*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 21359171
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    DUK10018194_002
    FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    Windel für Hühner in Melbourne / 250216 *** FEBRUARY 25, 2016: MELBOURNE, VIC. Kim Wilson with chickens wearing cotton nappies deigned by avian vet Phil Sacks at Burwood Bird and Anmal Hospital in Melbourne, Victoria*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 21359173
    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    DUK10018194_001
    FEATURE - Windel für Hühner
    Windel für Hühner in Melbourne / 250216 *** FEBRUARY 25, 2016: MELBOURNE, VIC. Kim Wilson with chickens wearing cotton nappies deigned by avian vet Phil Sacks at Burwood Bird and Anmal Hospital in Melbourne, Victoria*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 21359172
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772547_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772544_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772543_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzern Helen und Jason Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owners Helen, 47, and Jason, 44, Jones from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772542_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzern Helen und Jason Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owners Helen, 47, and Jason, 44, Jones from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772541_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772533_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk.***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772532_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772531_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772530_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772528_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772527_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772524_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk. Three-year-old former battery hen, JJ uses her beak to tap out the exact number shown on the face of a playing card***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772523_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse ... JJ mit Besitzerin Helen Jones

    / 131112

    ***JJ the counting chicken with owner Helen Jones, 47, from Felmingham in Norfolk. Three-year-old former battery hen, JJ uses her beak to tap out the exact number shown on the face of a playing card***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Huhn JJ kann zählen
    DUKAS_26772522_ACP
    Huhn JJ kann zählen
    JJ kann zählen - Aus Legebatterie gerettes Huhn überrascht mit Mathekenntnisse... JJ kurz nach ihrer Rettung

    / 131112

    ***Collect photo of JJ the counting chicken after she was rescued from a battery farm***

    [A rescued battery hen has stunned its new owners with her incredible ability - to COUNT. Fantastic fowl, JJ, three, had been confined to a wasted existence laying eggs in a battery farm before she was free by animal campaigners last year. She was taken to a shelter for 'shell shocked' hens where her new carers discovered she was actually a genius. When her owner Helen Jones, 47, shows JJ a playing card the brainy bird taps her beak on it the same as many times as the number printed on the card.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741835_ACP
    Legehenne
    British Hen Welfare Trust Tierschützer befreien Legehennen aus ihrer Käfighaltung
    / 281211

    *** The last batch of battery hens in Britain are unloaded at the British Hen Welfare Trust in Chulmleigh, Devon after being freed ***
    [ The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741830_ACP
    Legehenne
    Die Legehenne Liberty geniesst jetzt ihre Freiheit auf einem Hof
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals ***
    [The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741829_ACP
    Legehenne
    Die Legehenne Liberty geniesst jetzt ihre Freiheit auf einem Hof
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals ***
    [The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741828_ACP
    Legehenne
    Die Legehenne Liberty geniesst jetzt ihre Freiheit auf einem Hof
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals ***
    [The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741826_ACP
    Legehenne
    Die Legehenne Liberty geniesst jetzt ihre Freiheit auf einem Hof
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals ***
    [The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741824_ACP
    Legehenne
    British Hen Welfare Trust Gründerin Jane Howorth kämpft für das Wohlergehen der Legehennen in Käfighaltung
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals. She is pictured with Jane Howorth from the British Hen Welfare Trust ***
    [ The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741822_ACP
    Legehenne
    British Hen Welfare Trust Gründerin Jane Howorth kämpft für das Wohlergehen der Legehennen in Käfighaltung
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals. She is pictured with Jane Howorth from the British Hen Welfare Trust ***
    [ The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Legehenne
    DUKAS_21741821_ACP
    Legehenne
    British Hen Welfare Trust Gründerin Jane Howorth kämpft für das Wohlergehen der Legehennen in Käfighaltung
    / 281211

    *** This was the moment that Britain's last ever battery hen Liberty stretched her wings and was set free - ahead of a ban on all such caged animals. She is pictured with Jane Howorth from the British Hen Welfare Trust ***
    [ The lucky clucker - nicknamed Liberty - was the last of 300,000 hens to be released for re-homing by welfare chiefs. She will now spend her days being cared for on a farm in Chulmleigh, Devon, after being rescued from a battery-cage farm in the county. The feathered flier is one of thousands given a new lease of life before new EU rules abolish the battery hen system from January 1.] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS