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You really need a bigger, better coop design!!! I know your DH doesn't want to hear that but the amount of time and energy (and back pain) that I save with a well designed coop makes such a huge difference I can't begin to tell you how much more I love my chickens now than ever before!
I used to have my chickens in a small makeshift shed that was not designed to ever house chickens! I loved the fresh eggs but that is the only reason I kept them. I grew to hate the chickens and the amount of work they created! Now I'm finding that not only do I love fresh eggs but I love my girls as well! The chores are almost non-existent (by comparison anyway) and they are so much fun, I just love them to death!
I had no idea that it was simply the design of my coop and run that made the whole ordeal so unpleasant before. It was not the chickens fault at all! Do a bunch of research the next time (like MissAnnieFrannie is doing here) and make it work for
you!
I totally agree with you about the effort trying to make the coop work making the chickens no fun. I did the research and got the design for my coop right off the coop pages here on BYC, but DH thought some elements in that coop were "extras" that weren't necessary. ("I've had chickens for years and they don't need anything fancy.") He's already spent over $1000 just since last May on materials, not to mention his time, on my coop. It should be the Shangri-La of coops and it
is very nice, but there are a couple of things that I'd like to be different, like having a door on each end to facilitate easier cleaning. So, I'm finding ways to adapt what he's already built to make things easier. Plus, I have too many hens in the coop now. I started out with 4 girls and that's really all I wanted and what the coop was designed for. Then a friend needed to quickly rehome her 8 hens and she had some terrific layers, so I said I'd take them and their coop. Well, talk about a poorly-designed mess of a coop! Her's was the worst you could imagine. I had to contort my body in ways I didn't know I could just to get the thing semi-clean. After a month of quarantine, her hens moved in with my girls, making my coop crowded. That's another reason why I took out the plywood floor insert in my coop, so that it would improve ventilation. We're all adapting (hens and me) to their living conditions. We've had a very mild winter here in Oregon this year so that means the girls have been able to stay outside in their run most of the day. Things will get better when their new run is constructed and then they'll have lots more room.
All this is a long way to say that I echo your thoughts about a well-designed coop making the whole chicken experience more pleasurable!
I feel for you!