turtlemh
In the Brooder
- Jul 18, 2016
- 33
- 2
- 26
I have 11 birds 8 chicks 3 Guineas. I called some stores for large boxes and they weren't helpful at all. Was thinking about going the kiddie pool route. Any ideas?
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I already have the chicks. They are around 1.5 weeks old. I was going to put cardboard around the sides and do a top of some kind. I have a large dog crate but it's not much bigger then what I have themBest,Here's what I did. I went to the market and asked them for the triple thick corrals they sell the watermelons in. (3x thick is important if you want them to stand up to the wear and tear) They like to give them away because they take up so much room in the crusher. Each one is 15 sq. ft. of floor space. When you set them up they have cardboard "wings " which stick out a bit at floor level on all 4 corners. This keeps the corners stable and the corral from changing shape. Large fowl need 2 ft. ft. each to grow out in until they are old enough to go to the coop. ( in my case I had them in the corrals until 3 mos. old) So I brooded 7 Light Sussex in each corral. They did fine, no stress problem. I cut a niche in the top of the cardboard on opposite sides and laid a 2x4 across, hanging feed and waterers from it. But it was messy , so I out them on the ground on a raised cement block. I had them in the garage. I laid down a blue plastic tarp and set the corral on it. Then added 3 inches of kiln dried hardwood shavings. ( the white bale at Tractor Supply) should smell like fresh dry sawdust, not turpentine. I laid a chicken wire top over the corral and weighted the edges to hold it down. Or you could lay 2x4's across the wire to hold it down. Worked great, I had 6 corrals with 7 each, 42 happy, healthy birds.
Karen in PA, USA
If you have chickens for very long, you get used to being looked at that way. try any tool store: Sears, Harbor Freight. Put several boxes together. Really, brooding outdoors is the best and easiest. However, not everybody is organized and has the coop ready before the chicks. I understand how life can happen and get in the way of the best of intentions. While it's not the best option for electricity, I keep an industrial extension cord between house and coop year round. I would not be able to keep chickens in the winter without electricity to keep the water thawed.I don't have the coop set up yet. Just painted the floor yesterday. It also would be too cold for them as they are not fully featherd and there is no electricity in the coop. I will maybe try the watermelon thing. So far none of these stores have been helpful and just look at you like your crazy.