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- #11
Thanks everyone so far for the replies! I know I'm going to have to do a lot of ventilation for sure, because in addition to just being in TX, our shed is not shaded. I can remove a couple of the walls and let it be open air if needed, I'm sure that will be easy to do. (Cover with hardware cloth?) Just have to think of a way to make it easy to close up those walls when it gets cold.
@slipswife you bet it is easy to get caught up in the idea of a cute coop, but I'm like you and don't want to spend so much money! I just want to keep them alive and healthy.
So here is a pic of the shed. It is roughly 7.5 feet wide and 15.5 feet long.
Some ideas I've had so far:
FLOOR: I want to do deep litter. I was intrigued by DarkMatter's coop with the sunken dirt floor. I might could replace the wood beams this is sitting on with some brick we have lying around our property and do that. Possibly the contact with the earth instead of a wooden floor would help with temps? Plus it keeps us from having to replace the floor after we tear it out (it's rotted in places too)
I also came across someone else's coop where they put a wall 3 feet in with a door and the nest box access. I really like this idea, since I could keep food and stuff down there. Trying to figure out a way to combine these two ideas. Guess just cut the floor short and put bricks underneath the edge there so I have a brick-lined pit under where the birds live? Does that make sense?
RUN: the shed sits at the top of a hill so I was wanting to angle the roof of the run down so rain runs off the side of the hill. But the size run i want can't all go straight out the west side because of the way the hill slopes. I have to make the run on the west and south sides. So I'm trying to figure out how to get the rain to not puddle on the run roof where the shed roof meets it. I thought I might put a gutter there to catch runoff just at that spot and divert it into a rain barrel.
VENTILATION: I probably want to leave the north wall alone, for the winter, wouldn't you think? The gables are just covered with plastic corrugation and particle board so I was going to replace those little triangles with hardware cloth. We live on a hill and we typically get a west-east breeze, so would that be a good idea to have those two walls just screened in entirely? And then, when the cooler weather sets in, how shall I keep the birds draft free while retaining enough ventilation? I don't plan on having more than 12 in there.
@slipswife you bet it is easy to get caught up in the idea of a cute coop, but I'm like you and don't want to spend so much money! I just want to keep them alive and healthy.
So here is a pic of the shed. It is roughly 7.5 feet wide and 15.5 feet long.
Some ideas I've had so far:
FLOOR: I want to do deep litter. I was intrigued by DarkMatter's coop with the sunken dirt floor. I might could replace the wood beams this is sitting on with some brick we have lying around our property and do that. Possibly the contact with the earth instead of a wooden floor would help with temps? Plus it keeps us from having to replace the floor after we tear it out (it's rotted in places too)
I also came across someone else's coop where they put a wall 3 feet in with a door and the nest box access. I really like this idea, since I could keep food and stuff down there. Trying to figure out a way to combine these two ideas. Guess just cut the floor short and put bricks underneath the edge there so I have a brick-lined pit under where the birds live? Does that make sense?
RUN: the shed sits at the top of a hill so I was wanting to angle the roof of the run down so rain runs off the side of the hill. But the size run i want can't all go straight out the west side because of the way the hill slopes. I have to make the run on the west and south sides. So I'm trying to figure out how to get the rain to not puddle on the run roof where the shed roof meets it. I thought I might put a gutter there to catch runoff just at that spot and divert it into a rain barrel.
VENTILATION: I probably want to leave the north wall alone, for the winter, wouldn't you think? The gables are just covered with plastic corrugation and particle board so I was going to replace those little triangles with hardware cloth. We live on a hill and we typically get a west-east breeze, so would that be a good idea to have those two walls just screened in entirely? And then, when the cooler weather sets in, how shall I keep the birds draft free while retaining enough ventilation? I don't plan on having more than 12 in there.

