Finally made our brooder out of an old shower stall that was left here in the basement when we bought this house. Working great!






We were going to save the bottom of the shower stall as a wall, but we couldn't get that part to come apart, the screws holding it together were so corroded that they wouldn't budge (and we had to take the shower stall apart to get it upstairs). So, we got out the reciprocating saw and cut off the base, and my husband had to refashion a super simple way to attach the end on that side with wood, but the other side he just screwed the side wood into the existing shower topper plastic. The side wood is just white laminated wood panel. I cleaned it out, took a whole bag of litter from TSC to fill the bottom. We might need bigger and better waterer/feeders. I did tape over some holes where the shower nobs were and stuff so chicks couldn't get their whole heads through and stuck in those.
After it's done brooding for the season, the whole thing will easily move outside as it's super light. The shavings will get composted, and this will get hosed out/disinfected, then stored in the shed.
This is now a couple weeks into using this brooder and it's still working wonderfully for our growing chicks. One of the best re-purposes we've ever done!
We were going to save the bottom of the shower stall as a wall, but we couldn't get that part to come apart, the screws holding it together were so corroded that they wouldn't budge (and we had to take the shower stall apart to get it upstairs). So, we got out the reciprocating saw and cut off the base, and my husband had to refashion a super simple way to attach the end on that side with wood, but the other side he just screwed the side wood into the existing shower topper plastic. The side wood is just white laminated wood panel. I cleaned it out, took a whole bag of litter from TSC to fill the bottom. We might need bigger and better waterer/feeders. I did tape over some holes where the shower nobs were and stuff so chicks couldn't get their whole heads through and stuck in those.
After it's done brooding for the season, the whole thing will easily move outside as it's super light. The shavings will get composted, and this will get hosed out/disinfected, then stored in the shed.
This is now a couple weeks into using this brooder and it's still working wonderfully for our growing chicks. One of the best re-purposes we've ever done!
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