Alongside the sidewalk of a boulevard covered with brick and stucco houses in Denver’s Alamo Placita group, two makeshift stone steps result in a nondescript window constructed right into a yard fence. Curious passersby are greeted by means of clucking hens, which every so often stick out their heads between the picket lattice looking for treats.
To the left, a hand-painted signal reads, “Hen Window Glad Hour,” scheduled for five p.m. Thursday. Peter Thulson, a third-generation Denverite, is the keeper of the birds and the stately space adjoined to the coop.
A hen is observed via a window cutout in a fence within the Alamo Placita group, so other people can see the yard poultry and feed them snacks in Denver on June 20, 2024. (Photograph by means of RJ Sangosti/The Denver Submit)
Alongside the sidewalk of a boulevard covered with brick and stucco houses in Denver’s Alamo Placita group, two makeshift stone steps result in a nondescript window constructed right into a yard fence. Curious passersby are greeted by means of clucking hens, which every so often stick out their heads between the picket lattice looking for treats.
To the left, a hand-painted signal reads, “Hen Window Glad Hour,” scheduled for five p.m. Thursday. Peter Thulson, a third-generation Denverite, is the keeper of the birds and the stately space adjoined to the coop.
A hen is observed via a window cutout in a fence within the Alamo Placita group, so other people can see the yard poultry and feed them snacks in Denver on June 20, 2024. (Photograph by means of RJ Sangosti/The Denver Submit)