Hi BYCers! I've been lurking on this forum for years, feeling a lot of coop envy as I've read about your beautiful coops and all the very helpful construction posts.
I have some questions about my coop and would appreciate any and all suggestions. Our coop is kind of like Frankenstein's monster with three connected areas that can each be closed off. It consists of a handmade coop someone gave me that has two nesting boxes and a decent-sized run connected to a dog run I bought off craigslist and covered with a metal roof and hardware cloth connected to a fairly large handmade run that is also covered in hardware cloth.
For most of the day, our three hens free range in a nearly half acre orchard, but I coop them up every night. We're going to cover the coop and run areas with sand on Wednesday. We live in southern California and have debated for years about the best flooring for us. Pine shavings drive me crazy because they are so messy and the dirt floor looks awful and uneven.
We're getting ready to introduce 12 chicks (so there will be 15 chickens in total... 14 chickens and 1 rooster) and I would like to know if you think the coop and two runs will be ok for all of them on the rare occasions when they are not allowed to free range? None of the chickens have ever been crazy about sleeping in the coop, especially in the summer, so I'm guessing they'll be sleeping on roosts all over the place.
What else can we add to the runs to make them more interesting to the chickens and less bored? What can we do to make the coop and run more aesthetically pleasing?
Photo 1: View inside the dog kennel run. There's an old door on a tree stump the chickens like to hang out on
Photo 2: View into the coop with a now very old curtain I made
Photo 3: View into the run from the only door. I'd really welcome any suggestions about what to do with all this space (p.s. all the junk on the ground will be gone and I'm also getting better feeders and waterers... galvanized steel rusts like crazy and all the neighborhood birds eat from the feeder)
Photo 3: View from inside the run looking out the door (there's a lime tree growing inside the run)
Photo 4: View from outside the run with the door closed
Photo 5: View of the covered dog kennel run and our beehive : )
Thanks in advance! I always appreciate the advice of people here.
I have some questions about my coop and would appreciate any and all suggestions. Our coop is kind of like Frankenstein's monster with three connected areas that can each be closed off. It consists of a handmade coop someone gave me that has two nesting boxes and a decent-sized run connected to a dog run I bought off craigslist and covered with a metal roof and hardware cloth connected to a fairly large handmade run that is also covered in hardware cloth.
For most of the day, our three hens free range in a nearly half acre orchard, but I coop them up every night. We're going to cover the coop and run areas with sand on Wednesday. We live in southern California and have debated for years about the best flooring for us. Pine shavings drive me crazy because they are so messy and the dirt floor looks awful and uneven.
We're getting ready to introduce 12 chicks (so there will be 15 chickens in total... 14 chickens and 1 rooster) and I would like to know if you think the coop and two runs will be ok for all of them on the rare occasions when they are not allowed to free range? None of the chickens have ever been crazy about sleeping in the coop, especially in the summer, so I'm guessing they'll be sleeping on roosts all over the place.
What else can we add to the runs to make them more interesting to the chickens and less bored? What can we do to make the coop and run more aesthetically pleasing?
Photo 1: View inside the dog kennel run. There's an old door on a tree stump the chickens like to hang out on
Photo 2: View into the coop with a now very old curtain I made
Photo 3: View into the run from the only door. I'd really welcome any suggestions about what to do with all this space (p.s. all the junk on the ground will be gone and I'm also getting better feeders and waterers... galvanized steel rusts like crazy and all the neighborhood birds eat from the feeder)
Photo 3: View from inside the run looking out the door (there's a lime tree growing inside the run)
Photo 4: View from outside the run with the door closed
Photo 5: View of the covered dog kennel run and our beehive : )
Thanks in advance! I always appreciate the advice of people here.