Americans spend about $60 billion a year on our pets, according to the American Pet Products Association, and not all of that is spent on food or care. Which goes to show you people are willing to do a lot for their animals. But one Boise couple went to great lengths to make a unique home for their backyard chickens.

BOISE - At the corner house on Greenwood Circle there are tiny, terrestrial tokens of extraterrestrial enthusiasts. From the license plate on the car out front, to the collection of movies, Christmas ornaments, and books inside.

Ellen DeAngelis has had a fascination with outer space stuff since high school.

"I'm more of an ancient astronaut theorist than I am like an Area 51 conspiracy theorist," she explains.

Recently, Ellen's alien affection has expanded to the backyard. She brought the idea of these peculiar pets to her partner Brett Wilson last spring

"I've kind of convinced him that we should have some," Ellen says of their backyard chickens.

She then convinced Brett they should convert their chickens' coop to a non-conformist kind.

"Maybe it was that clock you got me with the alien beaming up that guy?" recalls Ellen.

That inspiration led to quite an eccentric enclosure for their fenced-in farm fowl.

"It's weird, right?" asks Ellen.

Weird was what they were going for when they found some old satellite dishes, pressed them together, and covered them in foam and silver paint.

They spent every extra moment over the summer, and now they finally have a flying saucer-shaped shelter that is out of this world.

"Not very many people can say that," says Brett of his UFO-themed chicken coop. "And our chickens love it!"

The lights that wrap around the middle and illuminate the ramp were a late addition.

"You have to have the lights, you have to have the green glow so it looks like they're getting beamed up," Brett explains. "Otherwise, it's just another chicken coop."

So now Ellen and Brett spend their evenings enjoying the march to the mother ship and the thought of other worlds just outside their back door.

"Maybe it's more I'm honoring the concept of being visited by others," says Ellen.