I was thinking I need to segregate a rooster and hens of the same breed so I could prevent mixing of breeds, since I was planning on having 2 or 3 breeds. I don't want a PBR cock breeding with an Orp hen, or do I?
Why not? What is the downside? The chickens don’t care. There are reasons to keep birds pure, such as if you are going to show them or if you are going to sell chicks. But if you are going to eat them and use the eggs, what does it matter if they are purebreds? I'm serious? What are your reasons? If you let us know your thinking, we can discuss it.
I grew up on a farm where we depended of our chickens for eggs and meat for a family with five kids. Our chickens were not purebreds by a long shot. If you select your breeders for the traits you want, such as hatch the eggs from the hens that lay eggs and eat your smaller roosters and let the big ones breed, you can develop a flock that might suit your needs.
Plus, I was thinking having fertilized eggs layed in a different place would make identification and seperation for basket or incubator easier.
There is nothing wrong with eating fertilized eggs. Practically everyone that grew up on a farm with a flock of free ranging chickens ate fertilized eggs.
I like your idea about building bigger to start, but I was thinking about building additional coops as my flock grows. I know its twice the work to build 2 small instead of 1 big, but I have enough land to support many coops and fenced yards.
You can do it any way you want. Adding more buildings will increase the amount of places you have to take feed and water, so that goes back to your original post about extra work. You will be doing more work and you might have to carry that heavy water further. On the other hand, you add to your flexibility in managing them if you have extra space. I have a second smaller coop that also opens into my run and my run is set up that I can close a gate and section off a piece for that second coop or just leave it all open. That second coop is my grow-out pen, but it can be used for other things. Flexibility.
Smiles-N-Sunshine mentioned keeping them in a very small coop for the number of birds where they free range all day. People do that successfully all the time, but there are some restrictions on that. You need for the chickens to be able to free range all day every day. You can’t leave them locked in there for long periods of time. You have to have weather or conditions where they can get outside. If you go on vacation, you need to find someone willing to get up at daybreak to let them out if they are locked up at night. Some people don't lock them up at night or keep them inside electric netting or build a predator-proof run. Not everyone locks them up at night so they don't need the coop space.
Chickens need a certain amount of space. Whether you provide that space in a coop, coop and run, coop and free range, or just free range and let them sleep in trees depends on your circumstances and management techniques.
Why not? What is the downside? The chickens don’t care. There are reasons to keep birds pure, such as if you are going to show them or if you are going to sell chicks. But if you are going to eat them and use the eggs, what does it matter if they are purebreds? I'm serious? What are your reasons? If you let us know your thinking, we can discuss it.
I grew up on a farm where we depended of our chickens for eggs and meat for a family with five kids. Our chickens were not purebreds by a long shot. If you select your breeders for the traits you want, such as hatch the eggs from the hens that lay eggs and eat your smaller roosters and let the big ones breed, you can develop a flock that might suit your needs.
Plus, I was thinking having fertilized eggs layed in a different place would make identification and seperation for basket or incubator easier.
There is nothing wrong with eating fertilized eggs. Practically everyone that grew up on a farm with a flock of free ranging chickens ate fertilized eggs.
I like your idea about building bigger to start, but I was thinking about building additional coops as my flock grows. I know its twice the work to build 2 small instead of 1 big, but I have enough land to support many coops and fenced yards.
You can do it any way you want. Adding more buildings will increase the amount of places you have to take feed and water, so that goes back to your original post about extra work. You will be doing more work and you might have to carry that heavy water further. On the other hand, you add to your flexibility in managing them if you have extra space. I have a second smaller coop that also opens into my run and my run is set up that I can close a gate and section off a piece for that second coop or just leave it all open. That second coop is my grow-out pen, but it can be used for other things. Flexibility.
Smiles-N-Sunshine mentioned keeping them in a very small coop for the number of birds where they free range all day. People do that successfully all the time, but there are some restrictions on that. You need for the chickens to be able to free range all day every day. You can’t leave them locked in there for long periods of time. You have to have weather or conditions where they can get outside. If you go on vacation, you need to find someone willing to get up at daybreak to let them out if they are locked up at night. Some people don't lock them up at night or keep them inside electric netting or build a predator-proof run. Not everyone locks them up at night so they don't need the coop space.
Chickens need a certain amount of space. Whether you provide that space in a coop, coop and run, coop and free range, or just free range and let them sleep in trees depends on your circumstances and management techniques.