- Thread starter
- #21
So chickens hurt themselves coming down from high roost bars or is the concern that they kick up the bedding on the bottom?I would not put roost ladders in a coop that size, just one roost that runs straight across. Don't put it too high, because you don't want them to hit a wall coming down: maybe one foot from a wall, and two or three feet up from the floor.
Chickens will often use a ladder to go up as high as they can, but in my experience most of them will come directly down off the roost no matter how high it is, instead of coming down in stages even when they do have the option. That's why I suggest no ladder and just keeping the roost relatively low.
If you want to to try deep bedding instead of frequent cleanouts, you could move the roost up when the bedding gets deeper. Putting a board across the inside of the doorway is a good way to keep the bedding inside, just make sure it's easy to take the board out when cleaning time does come.
I am not sure you need a coop with solid walls at all.
Some people in hot climates build an open air coop:
a solid roof
walls covered with wire mesh
partial walls on two or three sides to make a sheltered area for the roosts (just enough to keep wind and rain off the chickens)
Basically, it's a predator-proof covered run that also includes roosts and nestboxes.
If you try that, I might size it like a run (at least 10 square feet per chicken), instead of trying to have coop and run as two separate things with a door between them.
If you're looking at prefab ideas to start with, maybe a dog kennel (then add hardware cloth to keep chicken heads in and raccoon hands out). Or maybe something like a gazebo, with hardware cloth on the sides instead of leaving it open or using window screen.
And it gets really hot during the summer but a couple months out of the year it can get to the mid to high 30s in the morning/night time . Is that okay for the open air method?