- Jun 22, 2010
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I am in country Western Australia....we have a few predators: birds of prey (4 types) tolerated, feral cats, foxes and crows where I live (I realise your predators may be totally different but some of the following may be useful). Ten years ago I redesigned my main coop and nothing has ever gotten in there. The "hen house" has a concrete floor (no burrowing in), the fly coop has the base wire going into the ground for half a meter (1' 6") or so slanted out from the base of the fence (again, no burrowing). For the first 3' of fence I have double wire.....chicken wire then aviary mess overlaid. I also put chicken wire across the top of the fly coop (stops crows, birds of prey and predators that can run up the wire to get in....feral cats and foxes).
The only other thing I will add soon is shade cloth as a third layer (over the aviary mesh) because crows and feral cats can pull smaller birds out through the fine mesh....a very unpleasant way to die..... Also chickens can't squeeze their way out when young.
Once I open the gate and let them free range I can't do much at all. I only put down vermin, not native animals.
We also have bobtail/blue tongue lizards that will come in and eat the eggs. I don't mind them (they look so contented with egg yolk spread across their faces) but they also bring with them the kangaroo tick. The design above keeps them out of the coop. Rats and mice are much more difficult to keep out so I place baits or traps in places my livestock, native animals and my dog can't get to. Oh....and the rodents attract snakes.....almost impossible to keep out so by reducing the rodent population they will (hopefully) hunt elsewhere (I don't mind them).
Hope that helps.
I am in country Western Australia....we have a few predators: birds of prey (4 types) tolerated, feral cats, foxes and crows where I live (I realise your predators may be totally different but some of the following may be useful). Ten years ago I redesigned my main coop and nothing has ever gotten in there. The "hen house" has a concrete floor (no burrowing in), the fly coop has the base wire going into the ground for half a meter (1' 6") or so slanted out from the base of the fence (again, no burrowing). For the first 3' of fence I have double wire.....chicken wire then aviary mess overlaid. I also put chicken wire across the top of the fly coop (stops crows, birds of prey and predators that can run up the wire to get in....feral cats and foxes).
The only other thing I will add soon is shade cloth as a third layer (over the aviary mesh) because crows and feral cats can pull smaller birds out through the fine mesh....a very unpleasant way to die..... Also chickens can't squeeze their way out when young.
Once I open the gate and let them free range I can't do much at all. I only put down vermin, not native animals.
We also have bobtail/blue tongue lizards that will come in and eat the eggs. I don't mind them (they look so contented with egg yolk spread across their faces) but they also bring with them the kangaroo tick. The design above keeps them out of the coop. Rats and mice are much more difficult to keep out so I place baits or traps in places my livestock, native animals and my dog can't get to. Oh....and the rodents attract snakes.....almost impossible to keep out so by reducing the rodent population they will (hopefully) hunt elsewhere (I don't mind them).
Hope that helps.