Arizona Chickens

I was leaning more towards building one from scratch. Other than it being more sturdy and designing it how I'd want it, I feel like my son would love helping me with this project! I've been reading up on Ameraucanas and Australorps. Should I look into other breeds as well? From what I'm reading, these two breeds do okay with our lovely summertime heat.
I haven't had any Ameraucana's (many are selling Easter Egger's and calling them that). I did have some Australorp's before though. They lay egg's well and go broody. I'm doing Bielefelder's now, and I'm in Pinal county.

I found an older thread here at this site where they were talking about getting chicken's over in Buckeye. There may be some info in that thread that you could use.

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/maricopa-county-az-help.716520/
 
The babies are 3 months old today, so time for more baby pictures! Besides the one obvious cockerel, some tails are arching like cockerels. No one's crowing yet though. We'll see how many pullets I end up with! Started with 13 that survived shipping and its after effects, I've processed 5 and sold 1 cockerel. I'm seeing lots of feathers on the ground every morning, so I'm hoping by another month I'll know for sure.
 

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I was leaning more towards building one from scratch. Other than it being more sturdy and designing it how I'd want it, I feel like my son would love helping me with this project! I've been reading up on Ameraucanas and Australorps. Should I look into other breeds as well? From what I'm reading, these two breeds do okay with our lovely summertime heat.
For any heat, especially in the Valley, I'd look at the mediterranean breeds--andalusians, etc. I have several breeds right now. Even though my nighttime lows are nothing like yours, and my highs are not as severe, I get a sense of more, and less, heat tolerant breeds. Of the babies, my crested legbar is the best, with the cuckoo marans/barred rock close behind, and the ameraucana is by far the worst. I had australorps once, just raised them from babies. I sold them and the rhode island red because they couldn't handle the heat, and I was in black canyon where it's several degrees cooler than Phx! Oh, my midnight majesty marans do really well. Bear in mind, any bird is going to do better once it grows up, than it will as a young pullet, just my observations of many birds I've raised.
 
I've been trying different wording when it comes to looking up Buckeyes ordinances. I'm not finding much. Driving through, I do see a lot of cattle, horses & chicken coops. I'm just not sure if there is a limit to how many chickens I can have, how far away from the house the coop needs to be, etc. Maybe I can do some digging on Facebook and see if I can come across any groups that are for raising livestock in that area or even Maricopa County!
You could call the town's zoning office, or the county if you think you'll live outside the city limits. It's hard to know if a location was grandfathered in if you drive by it, or if a coop that's in the city is having problems with the town also.
 
The babies are 3 months old today, so time for more baby pictures! Besides the one obvious cockerel, some tails are arching like cockerels. No one's crowing yet though. We'll see how many pullets I end up with! Started with 13 that survived shipping and its after effects, I've processed 5 and sold 1 cockerel. I'm seeing lots of feathers on the ground every morning, so I'm hoping by another month I'll know for sure.

That last picture is definitely a male and a female.
 
For any heat, especially in the Valley, I'd look at the mediterranean breeds--andalusians, etc. I have several breeds right now. Even though my nighttime lows are nothing like yours, and my highs are not as severe, I get a sense of more, and less, heat tolerant breeds. Of the babies, my crested legbar is the best, with the cuckoo marans/barred rock close behind, and the ameraucana is by far the worst. I had australorps once, just raised them from babies. I sold them and the rhode island red because they couldn't handle the heat, and I was in black canyon where it's several degrees cooler than Phx! Oh, my midnight majesty marans do really well. Bear in mind, any bird is going to do better once it grows up, than it will as a young pullet, just my observations of many birds I've raised.
I think it has more or less has something to do with what type of comb that they have. The larger single comb's are more abt to freeze in the winter in colder climate's, but do better in the warmer climate's. I've heard that chicken's release heat through the bigger comb's, sort of like when we human's sweat.
 
I was leaning more towards building one from scratch. Other than it being more sturdy and designing it how I'd want it, I feel like my son would love helping me with this project! I've been reading up on Ameraucanas and Australorps. Should I look into other breeds as well? From what I'm reading, these two breeds do okay with our lovely summertime heat.
I found this....

According to Chapter 6, Article 601.2 of the Maricopa County Zoning Ordinance laws, a single-family residence with a minimum lot size of 6,000 square feet up to 35,000 square feet is allowed the keeping of up to Five(5) chicken hens.

Then found chapter 6 in pdf form.

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sou...kQFnoECAwQAQ&usg=AOvVaw2ggzAKiGUUDVPaXttaaorw

But it only talks about lots up to 35000sq ft. So... I'll keep digging.
 
I found this....

According to Chapter 6, Article 601.2 of the Maricopa County Zoning Ordinance laws, a single-family residence with a minimum lot size of 6,000 square feet up to 35,000 square feet is allowed the keeping of up to Five(5) chicken hens.

Then found chapter 6 in pdf form.

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sou...kQFnoECAwQAQ&usg=AOvVaw2ggzAKiGUUDVPaXttaaorw

But it only talks about lots up to 35000sq ft. So... I'll keep digging.

I think the modern sized acre is 43,560 square feet.
 
The babies are 3 months old today, so time for more baby pictures! Besides the one obvious cockerel, some tails are arching like cockerels. No one's crowing yet though. We'll see how many pullets I end up with! Started with 13 that survived shipping and its after effects, I've processed 5 and sold 1 cockerel. I'm seeing lots of feathers on the ground every morning, so I'm hoping by another month I'll know for sure.
That black EE still makes me swoon. 😮
 

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