getting the permit was SO easy and relaxed, I used Google SketchUp to design my coop and run, that was not the easy part, then head over to Animal Control, they are open Wednesday, the lady on the "stray" side gave me the application, saw my plans and a makeshift dimensions/property measurement work up I did and I was good to go, I walked out with the permit in hand. The hard part there was trying not to get overly excited in the Animal Control building!!!
I measured from my house to the proposed coop edge, coop edge to either fence/property line, and the far side of the coop to the back fence/property line. I drew in the coop and property markup, noted that the neighbors "dwelling" was near/at my house line and that was plenty for them. As long as you are 15' from the neighbors dwellings then they are happy...
When I went to the zoning division at city hall they looked over my plans and asked about the height of the coop but in all said the permit was done through Animal Control. The entire process, including the unneeded visit to Zoning and a sandwich at the City Hall deli then the hop over to Animal Control probably took me 2 hours. 20 minutes max at Animal control.
Here are the plans I took with my to Animal Control.
I was looking at this site Cheap Chicks Farm based on a BYC member's profile. I haven't decided on breeds yet but I am leaning toward standards, which is hard because the little Bantams seem so cute!
We are planning to go to Southern States in March when they arrive and if not maybe I can convince my guy that a swap is best, farmer meet-up when they bring chicks to SS to sell?
What breeds are you planning on?
Wendy
I measured from my house to the proposed coop edge, coop edge to either fence/property line, and the far side of the coop to the back fence/property line. I drew in the coop and property markup, noted that the neighbors "dwelling" was near/at my house line and that was plenty for them. As long as you are 15' from the neighbors dwellings then they are happy...
When I went to the zoning division at city hall they looked over my plans and asked about the height of the coop but in all said the permit was done through Animal Control. The entire process, including the unneeded visit to Zoning and a sandwich at the City Hall deli then the hop over to Animal Control probably took me 2 hours. 20 minutes max at Animal control.
I was looking at this site Cheap Chicks Farm based on a BYC member's profile. I haven't decided on breeds yet but I am leaning toward standards, which is hard because the little Bantams seem so cute!
We are planning to go to Southern States in March when they arrive and if not maybe I can convince my guy that a swap is best, farmer meet-up when they bring chicks to SS to sell?
What breeds are you planning on?
Wendy