My chickens and nest boxes :)

Do/did you provide curtains for your girls' nesting boxes?


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Nov 7, 2021
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Lyric's World
I made a slide chart of my chicken broods' ages. I realized I enthusiastically over estimated some of their ages. Anywho, we put three nesting boxes in the coop and it's too soon. :idunno The oldest set that I have affectionately known as Brood No. 1 are only 17 weeks, duh. According to my reading they won't need nesting boxes until they are 20 weeks old. Oh well, I'm leavin' 'em in there. Brood No. 1 consists of four Ameraucana and four Buff Orpingtons, btw. I can use the time to think about curtains for their boxes.
 
While I understand why chickens might enjoy the privacy of having curtains, I can't imagine how dusty and dirty those would become. Maybe my chickens are just slobs? I have a tarp that I use in my avatar coop as a poop hammock, and it benefits greatly from being hosed off, so maybe if curtains were made of something similar?

PBS used to broadcast a show with a famous chicken keeper whose coops were always spotless, including the fabric curtains for her nest boxes. I always wondered what the coops looked like when the cameras weren't running.

I wouldn't be concerned about having nest boxes "too early." I've always put my youngsters into coops with boxes already installed. I usually put in fake eggs to encourage them to use the boxes for good (laying), not (evil) sleeping and pooping.

Good luck with your girls!
 
While I understand why chickens might enjoy the privacy of having curtains, I can't imagine how dusty and dirty those would become. Maybe my chickens are just slobs? I have a tarp that I use in my avatar coop as a poop hammock, and it benefits greatly from being hosed off, so maybe if curtains were made of something similar?

PBS used to broadcast a show with a famous chicken keeper whose coops were always spotless, including the fabric curtains for her nest boxes. I always wondered what the coops looked like when the cameras weren't running.

I wouldn't be concerned about having nest boxes "too early." I've always put my youngsters into coops with boxes already installed. I usually put in fake eggs to encourage them to use the boxes for good (laying), not (evil) sleeping and pooping.

Good luck with your girls!
X2 to everything you say here!

I had curtains in my first coop. They stayed relatively clean, much to my surprise, but I only had 4 hens in an oversized coop. I now have 15 hens. And you have even more. The dust my girls kick up is unreal.

I might consider curtains again depending on the type of nest boxes. Moat folks have the boxes built into the sides of their coops and open from the outside. I don't think curtains are beneficial for those as they are closed in with walls and a low "ceiling." If I had nesting boxes that were more open, like a box on the coop floor or something similar, I might rig curtains. Just kinda depends.

I have those plastic nesting boxes that attach to the coop wall. No need for curtains now, but the girls prefer the box that gets no direct sunlight in the morning, so I do believe they want some privacy or at least some darkness. Curtains might help with that.
 
I'm not sure how the hens need privacy in a nest box view came about. Security certainly but the privacy business is a human notion.
The most popular nest box I've built is shown in the picture below. I had queues of hens waiting to use this nest box in my house with hens sitting and hatching their chicks in it.
P1191279.JPG
 
I'm not sure how the hens need privacy in a nest box view came about. Security certainly but the privacy business is a human notion.
The most popular nest box I've built is shown in the picture below. I had queues of hens waiting to use this nest box in my house with hens sitting and hatching their chicks in it.
View attachment 3304668
Then there must be another reason my girls like that dark box. Who knows? Chickens... Smh...
 
A hen is vulnerable while sitting in the nest, especially because in the context of wild chickens, the rooster/flock wouldn't be there with her to protect her - she'd wander off and hide in the bushes to lay, and then rejoin the flock when done. So she has an instinct to want to seek out a hidden spot somewhere, where she can feel safe. Hence the need for "privacy" - she just wants to hide, and curtains might provide an extra feeling of safety. That being said, those instincts are old and most chickens nowadays don't lay their eggs out in the open jungle. The coop itself might satisfy the need for a secure hiding spot, and once in there, the hen may not care about the extra layer of security of an enclosed/curtained box. And if you want to give her the extra layer of security, you can achieve the same result by making the entry hole into the box smaller, so it's not the whole side of the box that's open.
 
I'm not sure how the hens need privacy in a nest box view came about. Security certainly but the privacy business is a human notion.
The most popular nest box I've built is shown in the picture below. I had queues of hens waiting to use this nest box in my house with hens sitting and hatching their chicks in it.
View attachment 3304668
My nest boxes don’t have tops…look similar to that @Shadrach DH says he will put a slanted top over if they don’t use the boxes, but leave them for now until we start getting eggs. Your pic gives me hope I won’t have to add anything to the coop! 😊
 
My nest boxes don’t have tops…look similar to that @Shadrach DH says he will put a slanted top over if they don’t use the boxes, but leave them for now until we start getting eggs. Your pic gives me hope I won’t have to add anything to the coop! 😊
My boxes have a top that can open, for easier access (especially to take chickens out if I don't want them brooding). In the summer, I leave it permanently open to get some air in there, because everything gets so hot. The hens don't seem to mind at all, they still use the boxes just fine even without a top.
 
My nest boxes don’t have tops…look similar to that @Shadrach DH says he will put a slanted top over if they don’t use the boxes, but leave them for now until we start getting eggs. Your pic gives me hope I won’t have to add anything to the coop! 😊
The house nest box was a pretty easy bet really. Tribe 1 used to come and go in the house as they pleased and quite rightly thought it the safest place available. I wanted to be able to see what they did when laying, sitting and hatching so open top was a must.
The roosters brought the new layers there and one thing I've often wondered about is whether the fact that chicks had been successfully hatched in that nest made some difference.
 

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