TWEAK MY COOP~Tweaks on the Cheap

Great score!!! I'm currently finding the weaknesses in my all purpose pen when it comes to broodies and chicks......I had to remove a whole trash bag of bedding from that pen because the broody keeps scratching it up to "find food" for the biddies....which means each morning and evening she has buried the water bucket, the feeder and everything else in the pen with the deep litter~and that nipple bucket is hanging chest high to her from the ceiling, the feeder is up on 2x6s, etc....that's how high she is piling this bedding. She's the busiest, most industrious broody I've ever had in that regard and is a good mama.

So, the deep litter cannot be used for broody and babies in an enclosed pen...check.
 
Raise birds in Tupperware containers and you think they're helpless & fragile as snowflakes. Or at least I think that's my problem.

Now I'm going to see if we can put a whole bunch of the path shavings on the bare spots of the run ... it seems to provide them some preferred nom noms underneath.

I should say "bare spot" as the run is one big bare spot.

Yep...that's one of the great advantages to DL in the coop and run...what comes up from the earth to consume the feces. They keep the soil loose for good water absorption, they digest the fecal matter and they provide extra food for the flock. One article I read said that a flock on DL could provide a good percentage of their protein needs.
 
Hey, Rose!!!
frow.gif
So, you and I will be coop tweaking together once again? Post the pics here if you get a chance...you and I love to tweak on the cheap, don't we?

This cold snap has put a hitch in my progress, but I really need to get it finished soon, even if enough to keep the rooster in there while I do the detailing....got to take him and a few of the girls to a show in March, which means I need to get him off their backs before he starts breaking too many feathers there.

For the first time in 40 yrs, it looks like I'll have to give some chickens a bath....
roll.png
Goes against my nature to do such a thing, especially to rob them of their good skin cultures and oils.
lol Bee you litterly had me rolling on the floor laughing about that. IF I hadn't see YOU post it and heard it from someone else I wouldn't have believed it. Good luck on your show and get us pix you know how we all love pix. Oh Bee the coop tweaking will be a little later if at all. Got too many things going on to start another right now and I can just hear hubby if I even said anything. lol What I really want to do is close in just one of the 8' sections that is already there but there will have to be a roof put over it and that might require a little under taking.
Got Chopper fixed today and he's not kicking too high this evening. He still looks a little drunk. lol
 
That wall came down easier than I had thought and is now ready for reconstruction....



Will be using this really great lumber we pulled out of the trash the other day in town...spent 20 min. taking out screws(most of which I can reuse) and nails and now have about $50 worth of premium grade lumber with which to build the rest of this coop tweak. Best part? FREE



Got the hardware to do this sliding door/gate and hope to get this project started and, hopefully, done on Saturday so I can get this rooster penned and waiting for breeding season.

I had scored a whole bag of antique dresser pulls some months back for next to nothing, so will be using a few of those as my gate handles. Should turn out looking pretty good. Sure wish I could score another old screen door before Saturday so I could make this whole wall a slider wall, using two screen doors that could slide either way for access to this pen.
 
Hello folks .. I have just joined this great chicken site .. I am new to this chicken thing .. "but i love it :)" .. I pretty much got an old coop .. that didn't have any laying boxes or even roosts .. basically it was a simple wooden frame with wire on it .. here is a link to some videos of what i have .. I am like you beekissed and others .. I try to do things wayyy cheap by finding things others might throw out (and did)

https://www.youtube.com/user/2WayStreetPolitics/videos?shelf_id=0&sort=dd&view=0
 
I never really posted back to this thread about the changes made to my coop, all on the cheap. I used scrap lumber from various things...old fences, many scraps from broken down wooden crates from back in the 50s-60s, other lumber from that era~read TOUGH...too tough to get a nail into and many holes for screws had to be predrilled. The only new lumber was some 2x4 for framing and such. [COLOR=008000]Now don't all you fellas laugh at my crude construction....I'm just a woman with old tools, old materials and very little know-how, so I do the best I can to build it strong but don't often worry about the finer details. [/COLOR] ;) I added another hoop to the back of the coop and enclosed the ends with wood. I also built a dog house on the back of the coop, big enough for two dogs, of pallets stuffed with hay for insulation. I'll post pics of the transition from green and basic coop to red and bigger coop/dog home. Tore the front off, removed the 2x2 bracing and replaced with 2x4, also placed bracing all along the roof line. The difficulty with a hoop coop is getting all the wood to fit the curvature of the hoop and finding a good place to fasten one to the other. This pic shows the nest box construction on that side... My scrapped together nest boxes, with cedar log pieces as a leg up into the nests. You can tell how much of this wood is pure scrap...I think it adds some whimsy to the whole thing, but one would have to burn down the entire coop to ever get all the screws out of this wood. :lol: Part of my lumber supply....all FREE wood! And some of my other wood used on the coop.... Outside access to the right side nest boxes...later on I put a magnet cabinet door fixture to keep the door closed, so the little bungee wasn't a permanent fix. The hens didn't mind the cobbled up nature of their nesting...they really seem to love these better than those plastic totes from before. This is from the outside access. The left side nest box is a single unit, hopefully for broody hens and such who are hogging a nest. It has outside access as well. Got the front of the coop enclosed with wood...finally! The large cracks here and there were intentional, for added ventilation at all levels and were easy to do with the nature of my building materials...it was like fitting a puzzle together to cover all surfaces and still be able to fasten to a brace. A lot of the hardware for the hinges and such we already had, stored here and taken from this or that house/cabinets over many year's time. I loved getting to reuse them at last, here on this coop. The doorknob is an antique, glass doorknob set I found at a yardsale about 15 yrs ago and had been dragging it around ever since, knowing I'd find a use for it. Found some reproduction glass knobs for the nest box doors to match, so it all worked out. The windows above the nest boxes drop down for added ventilation. I used 550 cord as a control for these that doesn't allow them to drop down all the way onto the next box doors. Used the same cord for the same function on the doors of the nest boxes. Then I built in the back of the coop and got to play with different ways of including adjustable ventilation back there. This pic also shows the new roosts...I can reach each and every chicken on these roosts, which I LOVE. That's important to me. The side windows can be opened to allow huge cross breezes and the back window opened to allow air in from the other direction if need be. In the summer they have air from all sides...makes it nice. A pic of the back of the coop before I added the attached dog house...another puzzle pieced together. attaching the boards to the side of the hoop proved challenging, but was solved by drilling holes in the boards and zip tying them onto the fencing like lap siding. Worked like a charm! One of my favorite changes to this coop was the addition of a clear tarp for winter wear....it kept the coop a sunny and warm place to be, as opposed to the darker tarp I had on there leaving it a dark, gloomy affair all winter. Best investment I had made in a long time, didn't cost any more than any other tarp but is made from much, much stronger construction. Large window in the back can be raised for warmer months..that thing is HEAVY. These knock down boards from wooden crates are heavy, thick boards. The flock LOVED the new coop, roosts and nests....you could almost see their interest and comfort in it all. Having different levels to the roosts was a good change for them and also the nest boxes being located on the opposite side of the coop than the roosts really helped also. The dog house...mid construction, showing the hay insulation. Even the floor is made from a pallet stuffed with hay, lined with plastic on the bottom and sides, then topped with heavy plywood. Dry and warm, you might say. The back of the dog house is a full pallet, stuffed with hay and on hinges so it can be opened up for easy cleaning of the house. The interior, with a heavy two layer towel over the entrance. This dog house gets closed in the warm months, as Jake doesn't use it then and I don't want chickens laying in there. That's the reason for the heavy door on the front. A feed sack retainer wall, stapled into this back entrance doorway to keep the bedding inside when I open it. I put down a layer of cedar chips, then straw and, on top of the straw goes his memory foam bed. In the winter, the front pop door on the coop is closed and the one at the back of the coop is opened, into a little porch the dog and chickens both share...it has a wall there to keep the wind from blowing into either door and keeps their "porch" dry and cozy. Back door of the dog house.... Then the whole thing got a coat of paint to bring all the scraps together into a more unified look... The yellow squares you see are a feed sack cut down and attacked to the roof to provide rain guards for my outside access doors...the rain was blowing right into those doors before I put these up. Feed sacks are so very versatile.....those little curtain rods you see on the front door are perfectly spaced to hold a feed sack with the end cut out. This little feed sack curtain acts as a wind block on days when the wind is capricious and blowing snow right into the coop...doesn't happen often but it does happen. See the feed sack curtain below on a subzero and windy day.... This little coop/dog house combo tweak on my hoop coop has been very much a success. I love sitting up in the coop now in the winter and watching the flock enjoying the added space, light and amenities now available to them in this larger, better coop. Some of my favorite things about this big coop tweak was the opportunities that arose to repurpose many items...the wood, firewood, feed sacks, a door knob and even a cord from an old heat lamp....it was used to wire my coop light. The pull on the light chain came from an old ceiling fan that had been removed from the home in the far, far distant past. All these little touches of reused items gives the coop a story...many stories. Here recently I did a few more tweaks to the tarps and it really improved the coop once again and I got to remove the feed sack rain flaps...I'll miss their sunny colors. Last winter I used an old kitchen step stool to hold my water bowl up and out of the DL and it worked very well....though it didn't necessarily blend into the rustic coop decor. :lol: ....so this year I was going to tweak again to build a drop down platform with a roost step to provide the same function. But then I thought....that step stool isn't doing anything else all year, why not put it to work again this winter? It's currently out on a stump with its first coat of red paint....when it's fully painted its new, farmy color, it will be used once again as my watering stool.
Hi Bee :frow Long time no chat my friend ! I hope all is well with you and your mom these days. Just wanted to say how great your coop is looking ! Spring is well on the way here...sun has been shining 3 days in a row and the temps were mid-Spring like here today. God Bless, my friend !
 
:hugs   SO good to see you, WBF!!!!  How is your beautiful place?  :love Really missed you and am so glad spring is sproinging at your place...it's doing so here as well.  A little windy and chilly, but the sun shines now and again to bring hope.  What a blessing to hear from you!  May God bless you and yours as well, for you have a true and loving heart, my friend.  :hugs


:hugs So wonderful to see you again, Bee !! Things are wondeful and God is so good. I don't get on here much these days but check-in when I can. Busy with life and that thing called work, but praise God that I am able to get up every morning and see what He has in store.

I've been busy trying to start building a breeding coop as I want to breed some of my BA's... such gorgeous birds, they are. I have a few broodies so once I get things setup properly I will put those wanna-be mommas to work ! I'm constructing a few raised-bed gardens this year as well as putting some much needed maintenance into the hot-house. It's shaping up to be a busy Spring around the yard but praise God, I wouldn't have it any other way :)
 
Last edited:
I am so happy that I came across this thread! It is amazing what y'all have accomplished with your finds. It has given me a big dose in inspiration. We just put our girls (only 3 so far) into their new coop about 2 weeks ago and we are already thinking of tweaks and things we want to work out. Y'all have def. given me some great ideas.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom