I don't have any chickens yet, I'm still in the research stage (and the finding out if chickens in town are legal stage), and I've accumulated some stupid newbie questions.
You know what they say about stupid questions, so I'm going to go ahead and ask.
#1. I have a family of 6 who uses about a dozen to a dozen and a half eggs per week on average. Would 6 hens keep us in eggs (with maybe a little surplus to share?)
#2. Would a 4X6 coop and a run of about 200 square feet be suitable as a minimum level of space for 6 hens? I could possibly increase that to 6x6 and, possibly, add an open air "porch" section with a roof, a wall to the west, and hardened fencing about 6X8 but cost is an issue.
#3. Research I've done in books and online and the use of the breed selector tool I found online suggests that black Austalorps and silver-laced Wyandottes are suitable breeds -- brown eggs, docile temperament (one of the kids is only 3), good layers, and aesthetically pleasing to our tastes. Summer heat here is blistering and winters are mild with rare ventures into the teens or, possibly, single digits on the worst nights of the year. Any particular reason to choose one over the other? Any reason not to mix them if both are available at a comparable price?
#4. The main predator hazard here in town would almost certainly be neighbors' dogs. The immediate neighbors control their dogs, but there are a few running around in defiance of the leash laws. Is the common, green, welded wire adequate protection from dogs if firmly fastened to the posts and backed up with anti-digging measures? Cost is a MAJOR issue for us.
5. Do chickens damage/kill mature shrubbery and trees? I could increase the amount of potential run area (perhaps rotating through several areas), if I could be reasonably confident that the dogwoods and the unindentified shrub that would provide desirable shade in a couple possible areas would survive.
6. Are live oak leaves and pine straw good bedding material?
7. I understand that chickens like kitchen scraps. Is it OK to put the kitchen scrap compost heap (I layer them with fall leaves), in the chicken run so they could enjoy the pillbugs, earwigs, etc. as well or is there a health hazard to them from the rotting vegetation? Would they tear the pile to pieces so that it was no longer an effective pile?
8. Would it be hard to get a couple chickens from the run into a tractor in the morning and back again at night so they could work garden beds for me at times?
9. Would it make sense to locate the coop in a place that would be largely shaded by deciduous trees in the summer with windows facing south and the west side shaded by the garden toolshed?
10. My soil is nearly pure quartz sand just like at the beach so drainage is never an issue. But the chickens would be on a slight slope just uphill of the path DH uses to get from our home to his office at the back of the property. Might it be a good idea to create a swale or trench outside the lower edge of the fence to trap any possible poop-contaminated runoff? Or is this unlikely to be an issue?
You know what they say about stupid questions, so I'm going to go ahead and ask.

#1. I have a family of 6 who uses about a dozen to a dozen and a half eggs per week on average. Would 6 hens keep us in eggs (with maybe a little surplus to share?)
#2. Would a 4X6 coop and a run of about 200 square feet be suitable as a minimum level of space for 6 hens? I could possibly increase that to 6x6 and, possibly, add an open air "porch" section with a roof, a wall to the west, and hardened fencing about 6X8 but cost is an issue.
#3. Research I've done in books and online and the use of the breed selector tool I found online suggests that black Austalorps and silver-laced Wyandottes are suitable breeds -- brown eggs, docile temperament (one of the kids is only 3), good layers, and aesthetically pleasing to our tastes. Summer heat here is blistering and winters are mild with rare ventures into the teens or, possibly, single digits on the worst nights of the year. Any particular reason to choose one over the other? Any reason not to mix them if both are available at a comparable price?
#4. The main predator hazard here in town would almost certainly be neighbors' dogs. The immediate neighbors control their dogs, but there are a few running around in defiance of the leash laws. Is the common, green, welded wire adequate protection from dogs if firmly fastened to the posts and backed up with anti-digging measures? Cost is a MAJOR issue for us.
5. Do chickens damage/kill mature shrubbery and trees? I could increase the amount of potential run area (perhaps rotating through several areas), if I could be reasonably confident that the dogwoods and the unindentified shrub that would provide desirable shade in a couple possible areas would survive.
6. Are live oak leaves and pine straw good bedding material?
7. I understand that chickens like kitchen scraps. Is it OK to put the kitchen scrap compost heap (I layer them with fall leaves), in the chicken run so they could enjoy the pillbugs, earwigs, etc. as well or is there a health hazard to them from the rotting vegetation? Would they tear the pile to pieces so that it was no longer an effective pile?
8. Would it be hard to get a couple chickens from the run into a tractor in the morning and back again at night so they could work garden beds for me at times?
9. Would it make sense to locate the coop in a place that would be largely shaded by deciduous trees in the summer with windows facing south and the west side shaded by the garden toolshed?
10. My soil is nearly pure quartz sand just like at the beach so drainage is never an issue. But the chickens would be on a slight slope just uphill of the path DH uses to get from our home to his office at the back of the property. Might it be a good idea to create a swale or trench outside the lower edge of the fence to trap any possible poop-contaminated runoff? Or is this unlikely to be an issue?