scootermagoo
Chirping
We are in the process of converting a portion of a decent sized shed into a coop. The whole shed is about 25x25, but we have partitioned a space that is 7x20 specifically for the peepers.
The floor is concrete, so I'm not concerned about predators burying their way under. We used this gun type device (brainfarting on the name of it right now) to secure 2x4s to the concrete along the perimeter of the partitioned section with OSB layed the short way (4ft tall) along the long side, and tall way (8ft) along the short side so we can put a people sized door. Between the OSB and the rafters we have field fencing 2inx2in, so essentially it is like a weird horse stall. Also put OSB above the rafters, because we have a quasi-feral cat that lives in the other half of the shed.
The chicken side has a window for light that we will probably be replacing with one that opens for the summer-and will put hardware cloth over that as well.
The birds will be pastured/free-ranged (seems people use those interchangeably) and cooped up at night. The farmer that we bought from said that coyotes and mink are the major problems he'd run into before...we have a lot of evergreen windbreak trees for cover from aerial predators right outside the place where we will be putting in the chicken door.
Getting to the point where I'm thinking about roosts and nest box placement. Would the shorter side be better for roosts, or the longer? Hubby wants to put in a swing down door on the long side for nest boxes/egg collection. What height seems to work best for nest boxes for you?
What are your ideas for easy/cheap nest boxes that your birds seem to like? If we build them out of extra wood, any input on size/ect?
Roosts- We have some old ash trees with thick branches that I would rather just cut some and use, rather than spending more money on wood. How thick should the branches be for them to be comfortable?
After we get "dispatch" the extra boys, we will have 8-10 layers and keep our favorite Roo. How many laying hens would fit comfortably in the 7x20 space as they will be let out all day? Not saying we will get more immediately....but...ya know
The floor is concrete, so I'm not concerned about predators burying their way under. We used this gun type device (brainfarting on the name of it right now) to secure 2x4s to the concrete along the perimeter of the partitioned section with OSB layed the short way (4ft tall) along the long side, and tall way (8ft) along the short side so we can put a people sized door. Between the OSB and the rafters we have field fencing 2inx2in, so essentially it is like a weird horse stall. Also put OSB above the rafters, because we have a quasi-feral cat that lives in the other half of the shed.
The chicken side has a window for light that we will probably be replacing with one that opens for the summer-and will put hardware cloth over that as well.
The birds will be pastured/free-ranged (seems people use those interchangeably) and cooped up at night. The farmer that we bought from said that coyotes and mink are the major problems he'd run into before...we have a lot of evergreen windbreak trees for cover from aerial predators right outside the place where we will be putting in the chicken door.
Getting to the point where I'm thinking about roosts and nest box placement. Would the shorter side be better for roosts, or the longer? Hubby wants to put in a swing down door on the long side for nest boxes/egg collection. What height seems to work best for nest boxes for you?
What are your ideas for easy/cheap nest boxes that your birds seem to like? If we build them out of extra wood, any input on size/ect?
Roosts- We have some old ash trees with thick branches that I would rather just cut some and use, rather than spending more money on wood. How thick should the branches be for them to be comfortable?
After we get "dispatch" the extra boys, we will have 8-10 layers and keep our favorite Roo. How many laying hens would fit comfortably in the 7x20 space as they will be let out all day? Not saying we will get more immediately....but...ya know
