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- #11
Great ideas! I have some plywood pieces, a pallet, a mirror...oops...not unbreakable...but will get one...and will get the cabbage too.First, would suggest not giving scratch till later in the day. Their feed should be primary. Then they can get scratch as a distraction later in the day. We find our chickens are self entertained early in the day, and don’t need a distraction early. Besides, if you ever let them out to free range, scratch rattled around in a container while you say something like “chick chick chick” or whatever, is an excellent way to get them to come running back to and into run to get at that scratch (aka: chicken junk food).
Get head of cabbage, screw eye bolt into stem end and hang it. Chickens really like cabbage, and will peck at it to eat.
Hay/straw/leaves to scratch through.
Can you put up any thing to block direct line of sight in run? This gives picked on chickens a way to get away from a bully. Prop a pallet up against fence or wall, put in a crate or piece of plywood, etc. Add a roost of some kind in the run to give another area to hang out. Add an unbreakable mirror they can see “more chickens” and be distracted.
Good luck
I am going to build a wire platform or two and also some roosting areas...which I had and removed when I started building the roost box. If you look under my avatar at "My Coop" page you will see where I placed the 3x3x8 roost box...you won't see a picture of it yet because I haven't taken any photo's yet. However, you will see where I placed it...and extension of the white plywood on the north wall of the kennel...you'll see I put a piece of plywood over the dog entrance hole. That is where the roost box is...up off of the ground and goes to the ceiling. Just imagine a 3'Hx3'Dx8'L box up off of the floor and attached to the ceiling. The birds have full run under the roost box and I have room to build a wire platform there to give them an additional 24 sq. ft. of run space...plus I have ideas for other roosting bars/poles etc., all without having to take up additional floor space. That's one nice thing about having nearly 7' of height to deal with. This coop is semi-permanent...meaning next spring I'll use the panels you see in my coop and add them to a much bigger coop and run.