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- #61
1chip2chicks3cheeks
Songster
I really need to make up a new plan, when I originally drew the first one it was just basic ideas, which are now totally outdated! I don’t think I’m really going to use any of the ideas I originally had, having learnt more about coops! I thought I could insulate it and put in air conditioningCould you attach pictures of your plan for the new build?
Poop doesn't fall through wire. It catches on it, slumps part of the way through and becomes very difficult to clean. Better is to make your walls and roof rat-proof with hardware cloth or metal lath securely attached to the frame and at the seams. Then keep the rats from going under the walls with an extra wide apron. Rats, in particular, will tunnel more than most species, so make the apron wider than the minimum and cover it with dirt enough that they can't see the edge or feel it when walking over it.
You may not need the hardware cloth or lath across the solid part of the walls, depending on what you use to make the walls. In your climate, I wouldn't have enough solid wall to bother with stopping the hardware/lath for it.... I'd just make a wire box with an open bottom and the apron and solid roof, then add some wind break around the roosts. This based on research (mainly Prince T Woods' open air coops for warm climates, and this website) - not based on my own experience with your climate.
If you can't build all of your runs this way because of palm trees or prices, you might consider building as much as you can this way. Then put a door or pop door between the secure run and the larger run. Put food and water in the secure part and make the door to the less secure part as unattractive as possible. Things like: furthest from any kind of shelter for the rats, raised above ground level, baffled with something like squirrel guards.

Open air coops do look interesting, and I want them to have as much ventilation as possible. It seems like a great idea with how hot and humid it is here. My only concern is that it’s very rainy here during spring/summer and sometimes even through winter we’ll get bad storms. Lots of potential hurricanes as well, so I want to make it as hurricane proof as possible (I even have an evacuation trailer idea… I love these chickens!). I haven’t looked into open air coops enough though, so definitely need to research more before deciding if it will work for us. One problem we have with the current setup is how it floods every time it rains, because there’s no solid walls. I don’t want them in wet conditions.
I plan on building something big enough for about 140 something chickens, at 10 hens per rooster that’s how many we’ll end up with if they indeed need 10 hens each. They may not, but I’d rather be safe than sorry and make it a little bigger. My chickens are quite small though, not sure if they’re considered bantams but definitely smaller than a lot of chickens I’ve seen. I have one bantam hen for sure. So I may be able to make it a tad smaller than the guidelines for standard chickens. I want to do rotational grazing as well, not sure if I mentioned that, so yes, many runs! Some may be less secure as you mentioned. That’s a great idea for the door. We have the land for it, the real question is if we have enough cleared land and if we can afford it!