you might find building a coop is not as hard as you think. if you can't drive a nail use a drill and decking screws. pretty much any one can do that. also most lumber yards/ home depot will cut lumber to size for little to no extra charge.
I would get some 2" screws and some 2x4's make a framework out of the 2x4's the same size as the old wooden wall. take out the wood wall. screw the metal siding to the 2x4's then stretch some 2"x2" welded wire (often sold as garden wire.) across the the framework.
dont use the hex shaped...
It's still working well have about 50 Wyandotte eggs in it right now. Hatches have been between 50 to 80 percent. Varies by how good I am at keeping the humidifier trays filled. At some time I want to put in a float valve and have the tray filled from a 5 gallon bucket automatically. Incukit...
Yes when used with a proper thermostat. But 900 watts is quite a bit of overkill and I would be leary of it starting a fire if not installed properly. 200 watts would be plenty for a fairly large cabinet.
I hope this is the right place to post this. I have been looking for a long time for info or plans on constructing a rolling feed bunk. Here is the story. I broke my hip last may and have been looking for a way to unload my feed without lifting on the bags which i couldn't do. I wanted a cart...
Anyone have any idea what would result from a cross of buttercup roo on spitzhauben hen? I was most interested in what kind of comb the result of the cross would produce. The comb calculators i see on the net don't have choices for those types of combs.Anyone ever do this?
I thought about doing it that way but decided to just wire it to it's own AC cord. Then I bought a power strip that has individual switches for each outlet plus a master switch. I have the heater, the xtra fan and the 3 turners plus a candler all plugged in to that and I can easily switch off...
Not sure if its visible from the pictures but about 4" above the top egg turner is a plywood tray that the water pan sets on. It sits right in front of the fans so air blows across the water tray drawing moisture into the rest of the incubator.
I am looking for some designs for fold away breeding pens. I have 2 buildings one with 2 heavy breeds and one for my Mediterranean breeds. About 12 weeks a year I will need breeding pens but want them folded up and out of the way the rest of the time. I was thinking of mounting panels to the...
Downloaded the app and the first time I ran it, it froze. It crashes quite a bit and on my older Samsung it is very slow.
The manage my flock section looks to be aimed at the hobbyist with maybe 6 chickens at most. I don't name my chickens (as I have too many to name) and don't see much use in...
sort of. I leave the water pan in all the time and that keeps it at about 40%. Then when i load the hatching tray I fill the pan to the brim and put 1 or 2 humidity pads into the water pan in a vertical orientation so it acts like a wick. That brings the humidity up to 60 to 70% humidity for the...
Having a separate hatcher would be pretty nice But I hatched chicks every week for the last 7 weeks in my cabinet incubator. My schedule was to set a tray full of eggs every Saturday. Every Wednesday fill the next tray and after the 3rd week move the oldest tray to the hatching tray and bump the...
Ventilation is certainly important. So is the health of your breeding stock and the way you store your eggs prior to setting in the incubator. My first big hatch was pretty disappointing but subsequent hatches are getting better and better. I think the first hatches problems were due to eggs...