Broody hen

You can get the hen to adopt all the chicks of a staggered hatch, but it is a lot of trouble. @fishin_dad do you have a small rabbit cage or even a live-trap like used for raccoons / opossums?
I have a small dog kennel that I could put them in. Another issue that I may run into is the other chickens eating their food unless I secluded them. She will get to raise 3 and if she won't accept the others back then I will leave them in the brooder.
 
Dog kennel might work. What I do is place chicks in cage / trap so they are right up next to broody on the nest all day long. They have food in water inside there little confines. The hen and chicks can talk to each other through cage wall without risk to chicks. They will imprint on each other through those interactions. At night I pull chick and place them under hen so they are closer yet and so chicks to be adopted stay warm. The imprinting appears to take place at night too. Check them at dawn to make certain hen and chicks getting on. If not, then put chicks back into cage for another day. You can force imprinting even with older chicks. What I cannot force is hens not far enough into broody cycle which is usually 18 or less days into incubation.
 
Dog kennel might work. What I do is place chicks in cage / trap so they are right up next to broody on the nest all day long. They have food in water inside there little confines. The hen and chicks can talk to each other through cage wall without risk to chicks. They will imprint on each other through those interactions. At night I pull chick and place them under hen so they are closer yet and so chicks to be adopted stay warm. The imprinting appears to take place at night too. Check them at dawn to make certain hen and chicks getting on. If not, then put chicks back into cage for another day. You can force imprinting even with older chicks. What I cannot force is hens not far enough into broody cycle which is usually 18 or less days into incubation.
This is her first time with a hatch but she is definitely in full mommy mode. She would jump down and keep the chicks warm when they would start getting noisy but she would stay but a few minutes before getting back to her eggs. This went on for 3 days before I put the first 7 in the brooder. She hatched 3 of the last 4. 1 died while hatching overnight Saturday. She still has the last 3 with her. I'm going to try to get her to take the first 7 seeing as they have only been away for 48 hrs.
 
The triangle versions far better for me when wind strong. I can get hens to move with those I have so long as they are not moved to far. I want a consistent design, especially with the angles as they are still the weak points. I have pups that jump up on the flat roofs too. They jump up on everything.
Silly doggies! Mine are afraid of the birds. :lau I'll go take some more pics for you. But first, this is where I had so much trouble with the angles:
5F1DE8D0-AE65-40BB-9B73-12E098BBD378.jpeg

Assuming an equilateral triangle, which I think, is pretty close to what I ended up with, all the angles would be 60°, but it's not that simple, because that's not the angle you have to cut.

Angles "a" butt up against the straight-ended 2x2 (green treated) front bottom framing member. I don't know what they are. Plus I was working on grass--it would have been a lot easier to fudge the math if I'd been working on a hard, flat surface. Angles "b" are also the same. Again 🤷‍♀️. I don't know how to figure them out and don't know how to frame the question. If you can calculate that or know someone who can, I think these pictures will give you the rest of the information you need to build this little coop to any size you like.

9969ED7D-0D10-4EE0-86F2-51D12DE77554.jpeg

Hardware cloth covering back vent. (I ran out and had to piece it.)
7A970DE6-F886-45DF-9AAC-A9FE1F20D676.jpeg

I set my bit of leftover plywood inside the as-yet unroofed frame and traced inside the back truss. I fastened a piece of 2x2 long enough to completely overlap both sides of the truss, along the top edge. This serves to stabilize the plywood, prevent warping, and provide a handle. Note the hinges.

EA06443F-1599-4A10-855C-8FFF9E2575C7.jpeg


I did the same on the bottom, but I cut the bottom stabilizer flush with the edges of the door. That didn't work, so I had to grind some off. You need to cut this shorter and/or bevel the ends. Otherwise it will scrape against the truss sides. You might do without the bottom stabilizing piece, since the hinges may work well enough to prevent warping, but my plywood was 3/8" and I wanted the extra stability.

91A2F023-0930-4A2B-9B8C-544B40E4C182.jpeg

This is how I fastened the door shut. You might do better, but I was making this up as I went along. Don't use a very precise fastener. The wood will shift and it will eventually become difficult to fasten.

99952053-6E76-4949-90D1-694047AB4C7A.jpeg

Here's a detail of the front corner & angle brace. I only did these on the front. The plywood floor of the nest box braces the back.

E9FCED1B-CCE6-4F67-97ED-259645A53D1E.jpeg

The second truss is situated just fore of the second bottom-frame horizontal brace/nest box floor support. You can see the edge of the plywood floor under the interior wall of the nest box.

E919F1BC-7298-4C42-A91F-2BF0FF029D0A.jpeg


I slid the plywood in and traced the angles for the interior wall, leaving a space at the top for air circulation. I cut out the door with a hand-held jig saw. Curves are stronger and easier to cut--mostly easier to cut.
9632682D-189E-44B9-84C9-A2151289BF6A.jpeg

As an afterthought. I added a piece of 1x2 to the inside of the doorway to help keep the bedding in.

FAE569A3-8AB1-4F12-9688-FAC97E3E3A8A.jpeg
Here it is from the inside.

6F9E538F-68E1-4A9A-B4E2-059AAF53C90B.jpeg


Here's an ugly bit. I realized I had nothing to staple my side hardware cloth to at the top. There ought to have been a ridge board along the top of the run portion. All I needed was something to fasten the hardware cloth, so I scabbed a couple of short 2x2s in by putting screws into them from the outside of the ridge cap of the roof. Notice my hardware cloth is buckled a bit. I did the sides first--that was wrong. Tack down the middle of the top then ditto with sides and bottom. Work out from there. It's kind of ugly, but still just as strong.

A114A682-5078-4C42-AF1C-D7A01D41DDDC.jpeg


This shows the screws affixing the nailer in place for the hwc. I had a bit of a ridge cap left from a roofing project, which covered a lot of the sides as you can see from other pics. I ran the regular roofing sideways because it fit better that way.

So... hopefully this helps. It's been a very sturdy little coop for me. I lift the front up to place feed & water.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom