For a few short years our first wood coop w/flimsy chicken wire was open to the elements -- rain, wind, cold, heatwaves, etc, and no amount of tarping or using popup canopies provided comfort or safety to our first coop/run. It was custom-built by a local feed store customer for our first two Silkies -- great design for bantams but materials were low-quality.Is that chain link fencing covering it? That will be good against raccoons.
Have you given much thought to snow loads? I think that the chan link fencing plus a foot of the snow we both get will be too much for those frames. You may have to remove the top cover for the winter.
It’s one is the big concerns I have for covering my run which is 16’ wide. I will need rather large beams to support a cover for that span. At this point I am not sure what I will do, the expense of the beams is too great for me. I will likely end up just putting some cheap temporary netting up. And take it down in the Autumn.
So later when we remodeled the yard we erected a blockwall around the backyard and iron fencing in the front yard. We added two roofed patios -- one for "people" and one for the newer sturdier "chicken barn coop w/dog kennel wire" placed in the same spot where the old coop was.
After treks in the rain to the old coop to collect eggs or check on chickens during hot or cold spells we decided the extra $2000 to have covered patio roofs, especially for the coop/run, was worth it for both us and our hens. No more hot sun beating down directly on the coop roof, no more concerns of stormy rain leaking into the coop, no more muddy steps to collect eggs, etc.
On the "chicken" side of the yard we buried the legs of a 10'x10' popup canopy over a 4'x4' sandbox so chickens can dust bathe protected from sun OR rain! The canopy legs have been buried for 9 yrs -- we replace the cover once a year.
The chickens don't like muddy rain -- especially feather footed Silkies so we put stepping stones on their side of the yard and two more popup canopies for shade/rain protection, & the popups also have been a great deterrent from local aerial predators (Coopers Hawks).
So hard to keep from posting so many pics but our whole retired life has been centered around chickens. If we didnt have zoning laws and nice neighbors we might've had 100+ birds by now!
