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- #31
- Dec 21, 2009
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Quote:
Thank Miss Jenny...considering that this is what it looked like at Thanksgiving...
...I'd say I've come a ways in a short time. I told my wife last night that I know it's cost more money than we thought, and if we had studied it closely and estimated accurately, we never would have built it in the first place. As it is, we were able to spread the cost out over several months, pay for everything in cash and finding the best bargains whenever possible, and using what materials I already had. Cumulatively it will cost less than $1000, but to buy a building kit will run you hundreds anyway, and you still have to come up with a run, etc. There is a baseline cost for a project like this that you cannot avoid, and I spent a few hundred dollars more by making it double walled, insulating it, along with the additional rock and timbers that were necessary for the foundation.
It's not so much the cost as it is the value. A grand amortized over the next 20 years (minimum) against a supply of fresh eggs every day for the same length of time is a great deal in my book. In this neck of the woods, the coop is also a good selling point, and for anyone who knows what TEOTWAWKI means, a secure chicken coop in a barter economy is most definitely a good asset to have. I'd much rather have $1000 worth of chicken coop in my yard than $1000 in gold instead. I can't have a Kruggerrand for breakfast, and gold ingots don't cook well no matter how much white wine you braise them in...
Thank Miss Jenny...considering that this is what it looked like at Thanksgiving...

...I'd say I've come a ways in a short time. I told my wife last night that I know it's cost more money than we thought, and if we had studied it closely and estimated accurately, we never would have built it in the first place. As it is, we were able to spread the cost out over several months, pay for everything in cash and finding the best bargains whenever possible, and using what materials I already had. Cumulatively it will cost less than $1000, but to buy a building kit will run you hundreds anyway, and you still have to come up with a run, etc. There is a baseline cost for a project like this that you cannot avoid, and I spent a few hundred dollars more by making it double walled, insulating it, along with the additional rock and timbers that were necessary for the foundation.
It's not so much the cost as it is the value. A grand amortized over the next 20 years (minimum) against a supply of fresh eggs every day for the same length of time is a great deal in my book. In this neck of the woods, the coop is also a good selling point, and for anyone who knows what TEOTWAWKI means, a secure chicken coop in a barter economy is most definitely a good asset to have. I'd much rather have $1000 worth of chicken coop in my yard than $1000 in gold instead. I can't have a Kruggerrand for breakfast, and gold ingots don't cook well no matter how much white wine you braise them in...
