Ok, I have a tendency to ramble so I'll try not to let that happen but no promises.
Right now I have 3 hens, 2 mystery chicks, and I'll probably end up with at least a couple more sooner or later. I want a rooster, but I don't want to mess up the ratio and upset the ladies. One (or both) of the chicks could be male and I don't want two roosters so I might only end up with 4 for now. The setup we have now is pretty awful. It was eyeballed and thrown together, the coop is small and hard for me to clean, the run is really long (length) and really short (height) and hard for me to walk in and the coop is the exact opposite end from the only door, there are more zip ties than nails, and all around it needs some work. Or completely redone, that's probably what will happen. I want this to be their forever home, meaning I don't want to look at it in another few months and have to expand/redo anything again, so I'd rather go too big than too small. As of right now I'm putting my limit at 10 birds, I don't think that'll change. They all roam the yard happily from morning until almost dark, they can go in or out of their coop and run any time but generally spend most of the day out walking laps and doing chicken stuff. I live in Florida, so even when it gets cold it doesn't really get cold. It does rain a lot sometimes. See, rambling already.
On to the questions!
Since they spend so much time out, do I need much of a run? How big should it be for 10 birds? I'm always hearing that a raised coop is important, can someone tell me why? We have little to no predators in my area, maybe the occasional hawk or a stray cat. I'm a huge fan of using trash to make treasures, so I'm hoping to use mostly pallets. All of the guides I've found for pallet coops have a lot of insulation. Being in Florida, where it's crazy hot more often than not, do I really want to insulate much, or at all? This one's probably dumb, is there any reason I can't give them rain water to drink? I'd like to set up a gutter and rain barrel system, but not if it's bad for them.
Right now I have 3 hens, 2 mystery chicks, and I'll probably end up with at least a couple more sooner or later. I want a rooster, but I don't want to mess up the ratio and upset the ladies. One (or both) of the chicks could be male and I don't want two roosters so I might only end up with 4 for now. The setup we have now is pretty awful. It was eyeballed and thrown together, the coop is small and hard for me to clean, the run is really long (length) and really short (height) and hard for me to walk in and the coop is the exact opposite end from the only door, there are more zip ties than nails, and all around it needs some work. Or completely redone, that's probably what will happen. I want this to be their forever home, meaning I don't want to look at it in another few months and have to expand/redo anything again, so I'd rather go too big than too small. As of right now I'm putting my limit at 10 birds, I don't think that'll change. They all roam the yard happily from morning until almost dark, they can go in or out of their coop and run any time but generally spend most of the day out walking laps and doing chicken stuff. I live in Florida, so even when it gets cold it doesn't really get cold. It does rain a lot sometimes. See, rambling already.
On to the questions!
Since they spend so much time out, do I need much of a run? How big should it be for 10 birds? I'm always hearing that a raised coop is important, can someone tell me why? We have little to no predators in my area, maybe the occasional hawk or a stray cat. I'm a huge fan of using trash to make treasures, so I'm hoping to use mostly pallets. All of the guides I've found for pallet coops have a lot of insulation. Being in Florida, where it's crazy hot more often than not, do I really want to insulate much, or at all? This one's probably dumb, is there any reason I can't give them rain water to drink? I'd like to set up a gutter and rain barrel system, but not if it's bad for them.