Here is the reply I received from Yashar on the other thread:
Quote:
Good question.
Coop: A pen or enclosure for birds; jail; To keep in a coop
Cote: A small shelter or shed for fowl, sheep, doves, etc.; a cottage
The stressed difference, for us, is a matter stewardship. I could call the structures we make for our chickens "coops" and ,most likely, nobody would say a thing (Resolution would).
The difference between a coop and a cote is a principle of the quality of care which leads to healthy animals. Domestication is not the option of the creature. So, there is a responsibility in the hands of those whom have a life in their control.
Chickens in particular have needs that are very often neglected. I nor you fly but, they do. They have systems and processes in their bodies that rely on the exercise that flying provides. They also would not, in their natural habitat, eat their own feces.
A cote offers an ability to meet these needs.
With that said, a cote is something you could walk into. Perhaps a shed; something with a peaked roof. It offers room for the birds to fly. There is room for the food to be off the ground and away from their excrement.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/70075_sdc13012.jpg
above: our most recent structure
below: feeding tables in cote above
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/70075_food_tables.jpg
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/70075_chicken_cote.jpeg
above
ur first chicken cote
below: our solar cote with Americana chicks
Notice the food off the ground and the "training" roosting poles
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/70075_chicks.jpg
So, basically, a cote is a chicken house that chickens can fly in. I can see how this is beneficial for chickens' physical health and mental well-being, but as for cleanliness, I'm not convinced. These photos of the Plymouth Colony Farm cotes show a space that's considerably less clean than the environment my chickens live in:
My hen-house is 6 feet high at its tallest point, with a roost 4 feet from the floor (about 5' off the ground), but stays much cleaner than what I see here. That said, I will probably build my girls a tall, outdoor roosting shelter this spring; attached to, but separate from, their current coop. Hopefully it will offer the same benefits of a cote without requiring me to build a brand new structure for them. They will still be locked in the hen-house at night, however.
Btw, I don't agree with Yashar's assertion that coops are prisons. I think it depends on the coop. My hens enjoy over 10 square feet each in their hen-house, and 24 each in their run. Plus, they free range in my large yard when I'm home, which is most of the time. So, no, I wouldn't say I'm a chicken warden (sorry if that was a bit on the defensive side).