So you still have that house but it is ruined? And there is nothing you can get for it!?That was in zachary and i dont even wanna think about that place is 5 mins from the comite and i cant do a single thing for it and fema wont help us again
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So you still have that house but it is ruined? And there is nothing you can get for it!?That was in zachary and i dont even wanna think about that place is 5 mins from the comite and i cant do a single thing for it and fema wont help us again
So you still have that house but it is ruined? And there is nothing you can get for it!?
Oh, I hear ya... sorry about thatNo they helped us the first time and its 3/4s redone i jus cant think about that
What do you do with your birds? We don't often get cyclones so far south but it does happen & I still don't have a game plan I am happy with.Thanks! Im hanging tight for now but we have three toddlers, i wont hesitate to leave for one second if i feel thats needed. Our bags are packed and loaded w plans for rush moving crates and grabbing the dogs and as many birds as i can Too
What do you do with your birds? We don't often get cyclones so far south but it does happen & I still don't have a game plan I am happy with.![]()
Yeah, I figured on crating mine in the bathroom. We don't have a garage & it's only 11 birds just now but I'm pretty sure they wouldn't be happy. How long will this last 4? Any idea?Haha Well i didnt have a plan to begin with But most importantly weve moved all the cages from under the tree that wants to come down. God forbid if the water comes up, bags are packed and ill throw all 100 birds into the backs of the trucks w the 4 dogs and cats too all to evacuate if need be. I wont have drowning victims again, God help me ill overcrowd em first, anything to keep em from drowning again. In the meantime weve added tires to the tops of some coops to keep the roofs from blowing away, moved the mobile ones close to the super stable ones. I had a number of grow out pens thrown together for just the spring boom and theyve been taken apart those chicks put into small crates in the shed for time being, overcrowded but fairing okay so far. Sand dirt and shavings added to every pen to help keep their floors drier let em bathe in dry spots often. Its been a helluva week.
Yeah, I figured on crating mine in the bathroom. We don't have a garage & it's only 11 birds just now but I'm pretty sure they wouldn't be happy. How long will this last 4? Any idea?
The Coop
Well my wife lived up to her promise and she loved those chicks. She did hold off on naming all 6 knowing that 4 of them would have to be rehoused at some point and that if they were named it would be extremely difficult to let them go.
Soon they were growing into pullets and we needed another housing solution. We could not keep them in the trunk much longer. The source of our adventure had a couple of you assemble coops that looked to be the solution to our problem and they seemed attractive enough to be in our backyard (according to my wife). This is where the biggest mistake we made occurred. We trusted the housing recommendations provided by the coop manufacturer. The coop (and enclosed “run”) we selected was supposed to hold up to 6 chickens. In the end it would not be big enough for 2.
So decision made, off we went to the local Tractor Supply to purchase our coop. Imagine our surprise when they were sold out of the one we wanted. Of course through procrastination and overall busyness of our life we had waited too long to get a coop. The pullets were too big to stay in the trunk any longer. We needed a coop and my wife wanted THAT coop. Tractor Supply found one in another store 75 miles away. So off we went.
Now as I have said before, we are suburban people. At the time we did not own a pickup truck or SUV, all we had was my 2009 Jetta. It holds quite a bit especially with the back seats lowered. However, there was no way this coop, even removed from the box, was going to fit into the Jetta. The side walls a roof were just too big. So we purchased some straps, fortunately I always have a blanket in my car (in this case my oldest’s Kansas State blanket) and onto the roof went the sides and roof. Here is my wife with the load on the roof of the car.
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Here is the coop assembled and awaiting the pullets.
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Here are the pullets in their new house
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Not long after placing them in their new house did I learn that they needed a roost. The coop supposedly had a roost but you had to remove the floor from the coop in order for them to have one which made absolutely no sense to me. So I built one out of an old post hole digger handle, some pieces of a serpentine belt off of our old minivan that we no longer had some screws. I cut the handled to the width of the coop, drilled pilot holes in the ends, placed a small piece of the belt on both the inside and the outside of the hardware cloth and then suspended the roost by pinching the hardware cloth between the serpentine belt pieces when I drove the screw into the handle. This enabled me to build a roost higher than the coop and nesting boxes. Here is a close-up of the end of the roost.
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Here they are on the roost. Unfortunately only 5 of the 6 fit at any one time. There was always one sleeping at the top of the ramp. Of course since we were going to drop down to 2 soon, I let it go.
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This became one of my favorite and most annoying things about the chickens and it wasn’t even their fault. There was always something that had to be done to make this $300 plus coop work for them. I loved coming up with the solutions but they frequently had to be done in the worst conditions as that would be when I uncovered them.
Of course by building the roost “outside” the tiny coop area, I was setting myself up for issues when winter arrived. At this time winter was the furthest thing from my mind.