I want opinions!!!
I'm sketching out plans for breeding pens, to be kept in 4x8 panels (for disassembly and storage). Background: I have roughly 1 acre int ehback yard, maybe half of that clear enough to use for chicken housing. I have two major coops/families (Egg Coop, aka Cream Legbars, and Meat coop, aka Naked Necks), each of which has a large paddock for ranging (to be rotated for ground renewal). I need additional pens for breeding, extra rooster housing, brooding, and/or quarantine. I have little nooks everywhere for these. I don't have the sketches done yet, but here's the idea. If it works out well, I'll produce multiples:
The whole pen is 4 feet wide and 12 feet long, 8 feet high. (ranging outside of this area would depend on use of pen, e.g., quarantine vs extra rooster). Enclosed "Henhouse" elevated 4 feet above the ground (with ramp up), made of plywood, 4x4x4 sides, with nest box/egg door on one side, roost in center/back, and along the back, opens to get to scoopable dropping pan filled with sand/sweetPDZ. Under the henhouse is where the feed and water will be kept; ability to shade in summer depending on location. Remainder of pen is a run lined with hardware cloth, built of 4x8 panels of HW cloth stapled to 2x2 lumber ( make these 2x4 to keep out varmints and keep from twisting panes in the wind. Carriage bolt the panels together for strength. If you have any narrow wire spots like where the panels join the house, put wood over those narrow spots. We had an opossum break into the run thru such a space because the wire was tauter and he could get a grip on it to rip it. The larger wire areas in the panels I think had too much "give for him to get it ripped. This was chicken wire. Yes, the birds had been forted up in the coop and were not hurt. We trapped it. ) (one panel with human door). Covered with plastic netting overhead. (Nope, use chicken wire. No need for expensive hardware cloth when the variments can just come down thru the netting roof) Deep litter method.
Thoughts? Input?
I use the panel system and love it. Easy to assemble, reconfigure and repair.
(I'll try to upload sketches once I finish them.)
- Ant Farm
Best Regards,
Karen in western PA, USA