In Which I relocate a very heavy Chicken Coop

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If it is standing and you have it in place, and things are going fine, I would just leave it. The minute it starts showing sagging or gaps in the framing, or things start moving, I would get out there with some beefier connectors. Bear in mind that this is coming from a guy whose coop just rolled down the driveway and not even a shingle broke. I may be overbuilding and you may be just right. Neither of us will know until one of our coops breaks apart.

I think that as long as you are happy with it and aren't subjecting it to any undue stresses, you have nothing to worry about. If you are planning on moving it though, and it might take a hit or have a tree fall on it or have people moving around on top of it, or whatever, I would find ways to strengthen it before any of that happened. We are talking baout structures designed to handle a live load of 6 ten pound birds here. Its easy to go overboard.

What I am saying is that Drywall Screws are likely OK if they are kept dry and the coop is built in place, and you have no other alternatives, but it isn't what they are made for. They are prone to breaking if over-torqued, can't handle twisting/pulling forces, and will rust in a heartbeat if they get wet. Just for fun, put a 1" drywall screw and a 1" deck screw into a 2X4 leaving the heads sticking out and try to pull each of them out with a hammer. A quick yank and the drywall screw will either break or come out. The deck screw ain't going anyplace.

On th eother hand, drywall screws sure are easy to work with, and they are cheap. This brings us to the triple constraints of project management...

Economical and Speedy - Sacrifice Quality.
High Quality and Economical - Sacrifice Speed.
Speedy and HighQuality - Sacrifice Economy.

Your call on what you want to get and give up.
 
Nelgkel - I'm 3rd in line for another coop on Freecycle. If the other guys can't a find a way to get it out by Monday. Its a big Mother. Not sure how the guy feels about heavy equipment in his yard, but we're gonna find out. This one tugs at the limits of my amazing abilities to move big stuff, and it isn't particularly well built judging from the pics. PLus its sitting up 6 feet off the ground on 4X4 legs. I need a napkin to start sketching on.
 
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We were figuring to have time into June to be able to move the thing, since our lease isn't up until the end of June. We just got done moving a 8 foot square shed up here almost 200 miles from our old place, and now we have to move again. At least the shed is going to one of the neighbors and we are gonna move it for him, which is easy since we just did it a few months ago. BTW, here is a pic of the coop just to give you an idea of the size and how it's built:

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and yes, i'm a bit nervous about it, because its 2 old gimps doing the work for the move... I ain't gettin any younger or more flexible...
 
Yer golden!!

First off, its on blocks so you can slip a jack in under there. Second there is no deck on your trailer, so you can lift from below once its on there. Pay my aifare, and I'll come down and roll it around your yard a couple times with you!

Seriously though, I would use 2 jacks. Lift the front, put in a fulcrum, and have everyone you can find stand on one end so it teeter-totters, raising the other end. Toss a couple blocks in there to hold up the high end, and lift the front again until its as high as the deck on the trailer. Since its oversized, you should be able to slide the trailer in under her.

Set the shed down on the trailer, and undo the screws holding the two halfs together. Now raise up the back half off the trailer and drive forward with the front half Secure the front half for the trip, then back up to the trailer and get th eother half on there. Spin it around, secure, and you are set to go.

IMHO Oversized is easier since you can straddle the trailer and still have lifting points.
 
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when I called to find out about this free one he had someone coming the next day to look at it to see if they wanted it! I said I don't want to look at it to know if I want it! Something was better than nothing! He said come and get it as soon as hubby gets off work! which we did!
And look at it now!!! My hubby is the BEST! the things he puts up with from me!!! :-)
 
Thanks WildBurro.

I just found out I can rent a skidsteer with a forklift attachment for $150/day. If I get the other coop, I'll definately go that route. Until then, I'll trim out this one and get it finished. Then if I do get the skidsteer I can move both coops to where I want them for one price.
 

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