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Lucille, my one hen that's old enough to lay, has been laying outside, so I wanted to give her an indoor place to nest. She's a portly girl (a cornish cross), so I was worried she'd be too big to waddle into most prefab nest boxes. After reading this I realized I had a cat carrier in the basement that I wasn't using. I popped the door off, lined it with some nice hay (and a golf ball), and put it in a corner of the coop. I leaned a long pallet against it, diagonally from floor to wall, to keep the chickens from roosting on it and to provide a little extra privacy. Lucille laid her next egg that same day, in the usual outdoor spot...but today she laid one in the cat carrier nest. It's not glamorous, but Lucille is happy, and as we said when building the coop, "it's good enough for chickens." Thank you for the idea!
Lucille, my one hen that's old enough to lay, has been laying outside, so I wanted to give her an indoor place to nest. She's a portly girl (a cornish cross), so I was worried she'd be too big to waddle into most prefab nest boxes. After reading this I realized I had a cat carrier in the basement that I wasn't using. I popped the door off, lined it with some nice hay (and a golf ball), and put it in a corner of the coop. I leaned a long pallet against it, diagonally from floor to wall, to keep the chickens from roosting on it and to provide a little extra privacy. Lucille laid her next egg that same day, in the usual outdoor spot...but today she laid one in the cat carrier nest. It's not glamorous, but Lucille is happy, and as we said when building the coop, "it's good enough for chickens." Thank you for the idea!
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