I was new to chickens this summer and at dusk they were always in the run and I’d put them in the coop by hand. After a week of this I felt I was doing something wrong and talked to a seasoned chicken owner. She said wait a half hour after sunset and see if they’ve gone in on their own. Sure...
I added hardwood wood chips a year ago from a local tree guy. They are wonderful. The run stays dry and smells like a forest. I wouldn’t use the pellets again. They didn’t do great with rain, were expensive and neither did the pine shavings I use in the coop. Since my chickens don’t free range...
I have 6 Buff Orpington’s. They are the sweetest and friendliest. I’m new to chickens. They are
10 1/2 months old. They do well in cold winters. Honey, Peeps, Buttercup, Gingy, Henny Wrenny, and Bertha (my mom named her so I had to keep it). I love them!
Thank you so much! I’ll have to deal with plastic this year since I have it already but will definitely look into this over the next year for next winter. Great photos too. They always help.
I live in WNY near Buffalo. We get very cold, snowy winters. It’s also very windy. This is my first winter with chickens. I know this is a basic question but when do you put plastic around the run? Is it according to temperature, weather, or just time of year like November? I want them to use...
I’m so happy to see this post. This is my first time having chickens. Mine are 10 weeks old too and I have to put them in their coop by hand every night. There’s always one that’s difficult. I put them in the coop 1/2 hour before sundown. Should I wait and see if they’ll go in on their own...
For an Amish built coop and run google The Henhouse. They’re located in Pa. They deliver the coop. They are extremely well built but expensive. It should last for years. I believe the phone number is (800)490-3163. Best of luck.