This is what's in my little coop right now. It is being used by a vision-impared rooster. He could probably deal with something a little higher at this point, but he likes this one so I'm keeping it for him. It's just some spare pieces of 2x4 I had that already had kind of rounded edges and I just put 2 long screws into each side to be an I-shape. You can see how much lower it is than the original roost brackets.
This is what's in my larger prefab. It came with very low roosts that I used for 3 years (you can see the brackets sticking up on the left side) but the absolute chonk daddy of a rooster that was using that setup actually snapped one of those in two LOL. Hence why I upgraded to a hefty 2x2. He has very long fluffy feathers so that's why this one is sitting on top of the 2x4s on the side instead of in line with the top of them. I used metal right angle brackets to hold it on (they're on the bottom outside edge so not visible here)
And this is one I used to use in the smaller prefab when it had young chickens in it that were less hefty: two lightweight bricks with a garden stake and zip ties. Please excuse the hiddeous degree of muck on this one - that's why it's not in a coop right now! It was last used in a chick brooder and I keep forgetting to clean it. You could use the original roost that the coop came with to do something like this design; just sand the edges to be smooth if they're hard right angles like mine were.
This is what's in my larger prefab. It came with very low roosts that I used for 3 years (you can see the brackets sticking up on the left side) but the absolute chonk daddy of a rooster that was using that setup actually snapped one of those in two LOL. Hence why I upgraded to a hefty 2x2. He has very long fluffy feathers so that's why this one is sitting on top of the 2x4s on the side instead of in line with the top of them. I used metal right angle brackets to hold it on (they're on the bottom outside edge so not visible here)
And this is one I used to use in the smaller prefab when it had young chickens in it that were less hefty: two lightweight bricks with a garden stake and zip ties. Please excuse the hiddeous degree of muck on this one - that's why it's not in a coop right now! It was last used in a chick brooder and I keep forgetting to clean it. You could use the original roost that the coop came with to do something like this design; just sand the edges to be smooth if they're hard right angles like mine were.