Coop Run Fencing Spam me your pictures please

momofthehouse

Chirping
5 Years
Joined
Feb 5, 2014
Messages
212
Reaction score
11
Points
88
Location
Seabeck, wa
I need some ideas for a coop run fence. We just put up a 10x10 wood shed and I now need to show my hubby some images of some good fencing ideas. I want to be able to walk in the run. Roof over run? They will free range five acres but just in case I can't let them out one day I want a good run for them so any ideas please post pictures!
 
I need some ideas for a coop run fence. We just put up a 10x10 wood shed and I now need to show my hubby some images of some good fencing ideas. I want to be able to walk in the run. Roof over run? They will free range five acres but just in case I can't let them out one day I want a good run for them so any ideas please post pictures!
Hi momofthehouse,
Tell you what we do which is very successful. Because we use this system it makes it very easy for me to help if needed because everything is done in manageable sections. Fun working together! We build our runs so we can stand up and walk inside Check with your township if they have a height requirement for fences. Don't mention the poultry run. Say "fenced garden" instead. Ours is 6 ft. Ok,
1. Build your run out of 2x4 panels 6ft. high and 6' long. put a horizontal bar in at the 3 ft., mark.
2. Cut wood 2x4 angles to reinforce each of the 4 corners and screw them in. Use 2 1/2 inch washer headed or bugle headed decking screws. These will strengthen the panels and keep the from flexing.
3. Affix chicken wire to the panels in 2 strips. This allows you to pull the chicken wire tighter. You want to buy both 3ft. high and 5 ft. high chicken wire rolls. Use the 3 ft. high on the upper 1/2 of the panels. Use the 5ft. high wire on the lower 1/2 of the panels so you have a 2 ft. overhang to bury in the dirt when you set them up. This wire buried underground will keep tunneling varmints from digging into your run.
4. Staple the chicken wire to the panels with fence staples or a heavy duty electric staple gun. ( we use 5/8" or 3/4" crown staples in our air stapler. Never use less than 5/8".). Make the number of panels you need to fence your run. Make a door in one of the panels which is wide enough for a wheel barrow (for cleaning purposes).
5. Now to assemble the run. Stand the panels up where you want them fasten the vertical panels together with 2 1/2 inch coated washer headed deck screws from both sides, not sparing the number you use. There will be a bit of uneven fit at the corners, don't sweat it . No need to use 4"x4" at the corners to eliminate it. Just screw them together.
6. We have a roofed run. If you are where it snows, you will need to build some kind of slant into the roof so the snow can slide off. In way to do this is to make one side of the run . Standard for snow to slide off is a 4" to 12 inch slope. Or you can build a 20" peak in the center and have a 2 angled roof. I cover the roof with chicken wire.
7. Now the nice things about this system are 3 fold.

1. In our township nothing goes into the ground. Everything sits on top of it so we don't need a building permit.

2. Since it is screwed together it is a "temporary structure" in our township. Another reason not to need a permit. Check with your local regs. Do not mention it is chicken run. Use "garden shed and fenced garden" instead. ( we also placed our coop on a raised 2x4 base that sat on the ground, again no permit needed where we live.

3. It is a modular system. If you need to expand for more birds, like we did this year, just cut the wire out of the panel where you want to expand, put in 3 more sides and a roof and , Poof! An extra 5x5= 25 sq. ft. more run!! Easy Peasey!
Best Success,
Karen
 
Last edited:
Hello from OREGON!
welcome-byc.gif
I would suggest taking a look at the Coop Run & Design Section here at the forum...TONS of pics, information, how-to's, etc. But I warn you...better make a big pot of coffee because you will find yourself in there for HOURS!! I got so many ideas, etc., from there my head was spinning!! Good luck and let us know how it goes...and do post a pic or two!!
yippiechickie.gif
 
We used cattle panels attached to metal fence posts driven into the ground. We covered the ends with welded wire fencing, then covered the entire run in chicken wire for protection against overhead predators. The chicken wire is wired to the crosspieces in the cattle panels. Hardware cloth was literally sewn to the outside, around two feet up the sides and then extending a little over a foot outward in an "apron". The grass is already growing through the hardware cloth and we'll be able to mow over it. Inexpensive (well, except for the hardware cloth, but we'd have needed that no matter what kind of run we made) I can walk in it upright, and if we ever get out of chickens the coop is easily cleaned out for a tool/gardening shed and the run becomes a greenhouse with the addition of clear plastic! We live in town and ours is easily visible from the street so we didn't want to be an eyesore. One thing left to do...we are going to attach white lattice to the fence posts all the way across and hang planters of flowers on them to make it even less obtrusive.


The white lattice will extend all the way across the front from the first fence post to the last one.


This is the side visible from the street. Tossed landscape fabric over the top in a couple of places for shade, and as an added bonus it sheds rain pretty well. Because it's permeable it doesn't fight the wind like a tarp does.

Let us see pictures when you get yours finished, whatever plan or design you go with...one of my favorite parts of this forum is seeing how creative people are with their coops and runs!
 
This is what we have on our run. 4x4 posts, 2x2 and 2x4 for supports. Started out with chicken wire and later added 1/4" hardware cloth on top of that. The hardware cloth is buried into the ground to deter anything from trying to dig under it.




More pics in the signature if you need them.
 
This is what we have on our run. 4x4 posts, 2x2 and 2x4 for supports. Started out with chicken wire and later added 1/4" hardware cloth on top of that. The hardware cloth is buried into the ground to deter anything from trying to dig under it.




More pics in the signature if you need them.
Oh, WOW....I wish I was one of your chickens and my HOUSE looked that good!
 
Haha. Thank you Blooie. My sister keeps threatening to move into my coop. I'm sure the downside will be when fall comes and I get to pick leaves out of the roof!
 
Haha. Thank you Blooie. My sister keeps threatening to move into my coop. I'm sure the downside will be when fall comes and I get to pick leaves out of the roof!
Yes, that IS a nice run indeed! You've given me some good ideas as I'm going to take the plunge and start work on my run later this week (if it ever stops raining). Do you get snow in the winter? I'm just curious as where I live here I have to put metal roofing on mine because we get snow...lots of it.
 
Yes, that IS a nice run indeed! You've given me some good ideas as I'm going to take the plunge and start work on my run later this week (if it ever stops raining). Do you get snow in the winter? I'm just curious as where I live here I have to put metal roofing on mine because we get snow...lots of it.
Thanks. I threw the roof together rather quickly after one of our Golden Comet pullets went missing. I was thinking it must have been a hawk. We do get snow but usually only a few inches at a time and a couple times a winter. It usually lasts for a few days then there is no sign of it except where it is plowed into a pile in a parking lot somewhere! We usually get more freezing rain and ice than snow.
 
Yes, that IS a nice run indeed! You've given me some good ideas as I'm going to take the plunge and start work on my run later this week (if it ever stops raining). Do you get snow in the winter? I'm just curious as where I live here I have to put metal roofing on mine because we get snow...lots of it.
I'm in Northern Wyoming, where we have 4 seasons - almost winter, winter, still winter, and August 15th. We do get snow...some years more than others but there's always snow. I took this picture on April 1st, before the coop was totally finished but the girls already living out there:



This was taken last week, and it's snowing again. WIth the hoops and the covering, the snow slid off.


And we do get some wild winds here, as evidenced by this house down the street. That's how the icicles stayed most of the winter from the prevailing "breezes". I think our run is going to withstand whatever nature throws at us because there are no flat, closed sides and the arches will allow winds and snow loads to skim off.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom