Tulips08
Chirping
Sorry for the length...
I am a brand new, soon-to-be chicken keeper. As of right now, I have no chickens or chicks, but I do have a little coop. I have a bunch of questions and I'd love some help so I get started off right and I'm not scrambling or kicking myself down the line.
About my coop: I bought it used for $200 (I have a very small budget to start this adventure and could not spend $500+ on a coop alone right now). It is 3'x4' with 4 exterior nesting boxes on both sides for a total of 8 boxes making the width of the entire structure approximately 5'x4'. It has no run- I have to build that. This will not be my forever coop... but I had to start somewhere, right?
About my yard situation: According to town ordinance, I have to have a 100' setback from every property line to my coop location. That means I have one place on my property where my coop can go legally (even though it actually puts the coop right up against my house and closer to my neighbors' houses than if I placed it closer to my rear property line which is backed by woods, but that's neither here nor there at this point). No roosters are allowed. I am allowed up to 6 chickens. Free-ranging is allowed and I have an acre lot, but we have lots of predators and my yard is not currently fenced, so that probably won't be a normal thing.
Questions:
1. How many chickens can I fit in here? I'm hoping for 3-4 if I build a large enough covered run which would protect from weather.
2. Does the coop have enough ventilation or should I somehow add more? The windows do not open, there is just one "vent" on one side. Any suggestions for adding more if needed?
3. Any suggestions for a run design that will not completely overtake the view from my deck/inside of my house? I need to still see my kids in the yard. Should I spin the coop around and place the run near the taller section of my deck? I'd like to make a run that I can attach to this coop or any other coop I have in the future, so I'd like it to be nice and big or able to be expanded. Or should I go down the hill somehow? This will be my first attempt at building anything so I'd rather keep things on flat land if I can.
4. Where would you put the food or waterer in the coop? Since it's so small is there some way to not take up a bunch of floor space?
5. Do I need all 8 of the nesting boxes if I'm only having 3-4 hens? Is there some way to repurpose them into something better or is it best to leave lots of options for nesting?
6. How clean/sanitized does the coop need to be to house new chickens? I don't know if any of the previous owners' birds had any illnesses or anything. Is there a great way to get it really, really clean?
7. What else am I not thinking of?
Pictures (hopefully these post properly, it's my first time doing this):
I am a brand new, soon-to-be chicken keeper. As of right now, I have no chickens or chicks, but I do have a little coop. I have a bunch of questions and I'd love some help so I get started off right and I'm not scrambling or kicking myself down the line.
About my coop: I bought it used for $200 (I have a very small budget to start this adventure and could not spend $500+ on a coop alone right now). It is 3'x4' with 4 exterior nesting boxes on both sides for a total of 8 boxes making the width of the entire structure approximately 5'x4'. It has no run- I have to build that. This will not be my forever coop... but I had to start somewhere, right?
About my yard situation: According to town ordinance, I have to have a 100' setback from every property line to my coop location. That means I have one place on my property where my coop can go legally (even though it actually puts the coop right up against my house and closer to my neighbors' houses than if I placed it closer to my rear property line which is backed by woods, but that's neither here nor there at this point). No roosters are allowed. I am allowed up to 6 chickens. Free-ranging is allowed and I have an acre lot, but we have lots of predators and my yard is not currently fenced, so that probably won't be a normal thing.
Questions:
1. How many chickens can I fit in here? I'm hoping for 3-4 if I build a large enough covered run which would protect from weather.
2. Does the coop have enough ventilation or should I somehow add more? The windows do not open, there is just one "vent" on one side. Any suggestions for adding more if needed?
3. Any suggestions for a run design that will not completely overtake the view from my deck/inside of my house? I need to still see my kids in the yard. Should I spin the coop around and place the run near the taller section of my deck? I'd like to make a run that I can attach to this coop or any other coop I have in the future, so I'd like it to be nice and big or able to be expanded. Or should I go down the hill somehow? This will be my first attempt at building anything so I'd rather keep things on flat land if I can.
4. Where would you put the food or waterer in the coop? Since it's so small is there some way to not take up a bunch of floor space?
5. Do I need all 8 of the nesting boxes if I'm only having 3-4 hens? Is there some way to repurpose them into something better or is it best to leave lots of options for nesting?
6. How clean/sanitized does the coop need to be to house new chickens? I don't know if any of the previous owners' birds had any illnesses or anything. Is there a great way to get it really, really clean?
7. What else am I not thinking of?
Pictures (hopefully these post properly, it's my first time doing this):
I just lost half my flock to one of my own dogs, due to a fence failure. Try to manage as well as you can, because any losses are too many!
That's why I didn't get any before asking because I didn't want to over-crowd them. And you're totally right, the coop is cute but not super functional. I'm not very attached to it, so I'm happy to cut it open and get more ventilation in there. As I said, it's just to start... I'm hoping to sell it next year and build or buy something big enough to hold our max amount of hens allowed (6, which would be 24 sq ft, right?). On the bright side, it is not flimsy by any means, so it does have that going for it.
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