- Thread starter
- #31
WestKnollAmy
The Crazy Chicken Lady
Quote:
I actually took one of my stalls that is 10x14 and cut it in half so I have two 10x7 pens. Unfortunately, I have bad boy cats in the back one and a flock of bantam Cochins in breeding in the front one!
That was supposed to be my grow up pens and I have used them for that but with the concrete block walls it stayed pretty chilly in there even with plywood walls and a heat lamp to make a box. Not to mention the mites just loved the plywood once warm weather got here even though I had DE all in there.
And it worked okay for chicks that were 5-7 weeks old for about 2 weeks then they grew so much that area was too small. Even 25 standard size chicks need elbow room. I can't really put a pen out from that so I could open the door and when I tried to integrate them into the free range flock they were terrorized so that was a no go. The hens were forever in the coop chasing kids around and eating all the grower.
However, if I build all this on the upper end and use that stall I can keep the pen I have out from it and young birds can stay relatively harm free. I will have to work on the fence as the ducks and snow have pulled it down and it is sagging but that is so easy compared to other things that need work around here.
I actually took one of my stalls that is 10x14 and cut it in half so I have two 10x7 pens. Unfortunately, I have bad boy cats in the back one and a flock of bantam Cochins in breeding in the front one!

That was supposed to be my grow up pens and I have used them for that but with the concrete block walls it stayed pretty chilly in there even with plywood walls and a heat lamp to make a box. Not to mention the mites just loved the plywood once warm weather got here even though I had DE all in there.

And it worked okay for chicks that were 5-7 weeks old for about 2 weeks then they grew so much that area was too small. Even 25 standard size chicks need elbow room. I can't really put a pen out from that so I could open the door and when I tried to integrate them into the free range flock they were terrorized so that was a no go. The hens were forever in the coop chasing kids around and eating all the grower.
However, if I build all this on the upper end and use that stall I can keep the pen I have out from it and young birds can stay relatively harm free. I will have to work on the fence as the ducks and snow have pulled it down and it is sagging but that is so easy compared to other things that need work around here.