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Very nice hoop coop and egg boxes! We have 3 functional hoop coops at the 10 acre farm where my breeding flocks are (LF Langshans, Pita Pintas, Silver Penciled Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds). They are not beautiful like yours but they work. We used heavy duty metal pipes for the base instead of wood or PVC pipes. Each hoop is made with 2 bent 5ft x 16 ft long cattle/hog panels, with a solid plywood back, and a tarp for covering. It is very windy in that area but we've had the coops for 1 1/2 yrs now and never had a lift off. We use a small tractor to move them around and give the birds fresh ground. We recently set up one of those portable garages from Harbor Freight to use as a temporary death row pen for cockerels. It went up so much quicker than the hoop coops but within a week, the wind had picked it up and threw it over. It was jail break time with cockerels running everywhere! It is now anchored down and hopefully will stay in place!
I did orient them for handling the prevailing winds and the tarp covers to the ground on that side to make the prevailing winds go over the curved part, hopefully pressing in down, not up. This wind came from the opposite direction and was short lived (in a thunderstorm).
I'm not sure I trust stakes that I have to put in and take out, moving a bucket of sand seems easier, but if it's less effective . . .
I now have to prepare for something that should not happen again (or at least not for a long time), so I think I might get tempted to cut corners on stakes if they are a lot of work to put in. I'm trying to engineer around my own laziness.
I love your Gazebo... What a find that was.... Cant wait till you get started again.... sigh I wish I could start mine.Well, I built my chicken shelter to shelter two existing coops. My hens only sleep in the coops.
BUT, the two coops didn't fit under the shelter and it was awkward to open and close.
So, I took the coops back out and decided to build a coop within the shelter. It will be bigger than either of my current coops with two 5' perches to hopefully minimize drama. Here is the foundation.
I am assembling my new table saw so I can continue the build. I'll post as I progress. I will have a solid floor and use deep litter method.
The angle is 4 degrees, they won,t be able to see the eggs and yes there is a water tight lid over the nest and egg-catcher ty for your ? and compliments.
I have a design for a community nest box and was wondering about the best angle for the floor to make it a roll out nest box as well.
Thank you...
deb