Greetings from Austin, TX! Got a sec to answer newbie questions?

Sqwidy

Songster
6 Years
Dec 13, 2014
96
23
126
Austin, TX
Hi! My name is Ashley, and I'm a soon-to-be (this spring) chicken-owner in Austin, TX. Right now, I'm still in the coop-building phase. We're finalizing our designs in sketch-up and had a couple questions. Can I get y'alls opinions?

  1. We'll have 4 standard-sized chickens, all hens -- are three nesting boxes all right? Do they each need their own? How big should each nesting box be?
  2. Are there weathering/wood stains we should avoid? Are any of the stains you might use on a fence or porch potentially dangerous to our clucky friends? Got a stain you really like?
  3. We live inside the city proper. Our biggest potential chicken predators and egg thieves are prolly raccoons, possums, or stray dogs and cats. How important do you think it is that the bottom (underneath the sand of their run) is fully mesh? I.e., if we have sunk cinder blocks around the base of the coop as the foundation, do you think a city egg-lover is likely to dig under the sunk blocks to get in?
  4. Is there anything that you wished someone told you before you built your coop? :)

Man, I'm so excited to get this built!

Ashley

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Glad you joined us.


3 nests are more than enough.. Most recommend 1 per 4 layers. I have 2 nests for 6 and it has not been an issue.

I would use a latex water washup type stain - like those used on houses not decks.

I think burying hardware cloth 2' out around the perimeter is best to keep the diggers out. Make sure you use 1/2" hardware cloth on all coop/run openings and not chicken wire..

I would suggest you visit the learning center articles and explore the coop/run forums.

I did read in texts and on BYC to build larger than you think..wish I had and would not have had to do an addition. Chickens really do get larger than we think…as you plan space think about feed, water vessels, ramps taking up the livable space.

Feel free to post questions under the forums. Everyone here are happy to help.
 
Welcome to BYC, Ashley! Glad you decided to join our flock. My wife and I were both raised in the great state of Texas. Sunflour has done an excellent job answering your questions. Just be sure and use hardware cloth for your mesh, not chicken wire, as there are a number of predators that can either tear through chicken wire, or squeeze through the openings in the mesh. Also make sure that your hardware cloth is well secured (lots of fence staples, or even better, screws and washers) to your coop and run frame. Also use a double action latch on the coop and run doors, not a single action latch as racoons and opossums can figure out how to open single action latches. Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. We are here to help in any way we can. Good luck in protecting your flock.
 
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You've already gotten excellent advice, and I would make it unanimous re: hardware cloth. No one saves by using cheap poultry wire, it deteriorates fast, droops and is very flimsy. It doesn't even slow predators down. Chicken wire only keeps chickens inside but does nothing to stop intruders
 
Raccoons are not only patient, cunning, great diggers, great climbers but have opposable thumbs. If you can open a latch, so can they. It would not surprise me if one day they learn how to open combination locks. Never underestimate them.
 
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Welcome to BYC!!! The members here are great and so are their chickens
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!!! This is the BEST CHICKEN KEEPING FORUM ON EARTH!!!!

Hope you have fun and if you need anything we are here to help!!

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Hope the time goes by quickly so oyu can get ure chooks soon!!
 

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