A few photos of my door. I think it works well and keeps out the weather better then a side opening.


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I realize this thread is 8 years old but you would not have a photo of how you access the bottom of the coop by chance? Thanks Shawn (641)203-4489 if your brave enough to text it to me. If not I unerstand.I have an 8'x4' coop as well, with the door on the floor going down into the run. I used 2"x2"'s to make a lip to keep the shavings from falling out. Honestly, not too many shavings fall out; sure some do but no more than my other coop with the pop door out the side with a ramp. Maybe my girls just don't kick their shavings around too much and I'm lucky that way, I dunno. It DOES take up floor space, but my girls are rarely on the floor anyway, they spend all their time up on the roost. I started out closing the pop door every night, but have ended up just leaving it open as the bottom of the run is safely enclosed with hardwire cloth to keep them safe. I keep the food and water in the below run, so I don't need to take up floor space in the coop with them.
Here's a couple pics:
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and a close-up of the pop door:
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@Shawnstone The post you quoted is 12 years old and the member who posted it hasn't been here for 5 years.I realize this thread is 8 years old but you would not have a photo of how you access the bottom of the coop by chance?
Hi Shawn, I have my coop on a slopped part of a very small lot, so I had to put the door in the floor. The shavings/straw do not come out much, in fact about as much as with a side door, but I am not using deep litter. I have a tile floor I wash in summer with water & dish-soap-&-vinegar. I use a broom to sweep the floor (which brushes it clean) and I throw shavings onto that to absorb the mess. The shavings then get picked up and composted or swept through the hole to the run. In winter I let fall a little more as that creates the insulation in the run.I realize this thread is 8 years old but you would not have a photo of how you access the bottom of the coop by chance? Thanks Shawn (641)203-4489 if your brave enough to text it to me. If not I unerstand.
Yes yes yes!!!!! This! I have the pop door but the hatch goes down and cannot be closed due to the ramp. Going to switch the hinge on the design and bring the trap door to the top. Thanks for the pic, I needed the visual. Skunks 2, Me 0 until tonite!I have an 8'x4' coop as well, with the door on the floor going down into the run. I used 2"x2"'s to make a lip to keep the shavings from falling out. Honestly, not too many shavings fall out; sure some do but no more than my other coop with the pop door out the side with a ramp. Maybe my girls just don't kick their shavings around too much and I'm lucky that way, I dunno. It DOES take up floor space, but my girls are rarely on the floor anyway, they spend all their time up on the roost. I started out closing the pop door every night, but have ended up just leaving it open as the bottom of the run is safely enclosed with hardwire cloth to keep them safe. I keep the food and water in the below run, so I don't need to take up floor space in the coop with them.
Here's a couple pics:
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and a close-up of the pop door:
![]()
i agree i have the same problem, and because it is steep two of my birds have injured legs.I have an A-Frame coop with a floor opening and ladder/ramp. Even with a "lip" around the opening, bedding falls out all the time.
The other issue is the hole in the floor has to be larger than a usual "pop door" because - you have to think about this now - the chickens are walking up a ramp and the opening has to be longer so their heads don't scrape along the bottom of the floor very much. Chickens do not duck well.
While the ramp is down, it allows more air up into the housing section of the coop. If you don't raise it at night, cold air will come up and into the coop. The hole in the floor takes away from available floor space, too... for square footage requirements. If you don't raise the ramp or otherwise close the hole at night, you may have an unwelcome visitor get into the coop at night.
What seemed like a nifty idea when I built that coop has turned into something less than ideal. It works, but ..... I kinda wish I'd made other arrangements.
Here's a picture of it under construction.
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