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I use dog houses for my smaller kids like my Silkies, and the Cornish have 1 now but they are quickly outgrowing it, its a med dog house and they just do have room to sleep. most nights they want to sleep outside cause they put off allot of body heat and the house just don't allow room for them to get away from each other.I have seen cute dog house used for coops for smaller breeds but plastic totes would be more of a summertime thing I think. I've seen what a 25 pound 2 year old can do to plastic totes. Snow is heavy and I'm thinking the tote would crash under the weight similar to how one of my older totes crashed under my then 2yr old. He thought it was a blast but chickens would not be amused.
I would worry about the snow collapsing the tote as well. I'm a worry wort....
Definitely a roost with what we find is best for chickens...a 2 x 4 laying on its side..so they can perch on the 4 inch top, nestle down over their feet to keep them warm in frigid weather. Last two years of these uber chilled Michigan winters and all my birds have nary a foot/toe issue we are glad to report. We put ours so the sleeping birds would not be near a draft from the windows. So I would guess high enough they could climb on and off without jumping should do the trick at minimum.Got a question????????????????????????????????????????
We are building a winter house for Waddles ( Chubs was killed by a weasel 2 days ago. Waddles misses her )
anyway the house will be 4' x 3'5" and 4' tall and will be 4" off the ground. We are getting him 2 hen off a friend so he wont be alone so that makes 3 they already have a covered run that I can easily block off in bad weather so they wont have to live in the house on days that are bad.
Q. 1 = would that be big enough for them to just sleep in?
Q. 2 = would you put in a perch? If so how high off the floor?
They are very clumsy and I personally think they would be better off without a perch but I have never raised these birds before and I want them to be HAPPY!!!! but safe at the same time of course.![]()
I would worry in the winter of too much moisture building up in a plastic tote. That would spell disaster for frostbite but I am not able to see if the tote has openings for air. Another problem we would have with the tote set up is the raccoons would be able to tear through it too easily and kill the birds. However, whatever container used for sleeping quarters more than enough ventilation is an absolute must for chickens. The bottom run piece, if covered on all sides with hardware cloth would make a much better winter coop technically. I would berm the sides with straw bales and cover the top with plastic roofing pieces on an angle to allow light, but also easy to brush off snow.
Winters here are hard on my chickens, that's why I always try and give them plenty of room inside. This year I have so many different pens that I am coming up with houses out of scrap and whatever is laying around. I would say 99% of the time my kids are always outside, even in the coldest weather cause I cover the runs and put tarp sides up in winter. and my big runs I will put up like an inclosed porch type of thing. so they always have room to get out of the coop without freezing. plus I don't like water in the coops in the winter so I want some place for that without the girls being too cold yo go out and get a drink.I hadn't really thought about using it in the winter it's more of a summer thing but I was told if you add a heat pad you needent worry about snow... It'll melt but I check often anyways so I could just clear it.. The idea came from a breeder who couldn't find anything for her 20 pound jersey giants to use as nest boxes so she used a tote with a hole and it worked perfectly not sure what she does in winter I believe she was in Texas so not much snow... Up here I believe it might get to cold even with a heat pad idk yet first winter here with chickens
Yes my poor boy is a cluts... God bless him, but I love him anyway.. lolAlso it might be that's specific Cornish is a cluts no offence but chicken cyclist has a perch in everyone of his tractors and they do fine but idk really your choice he doesn't need it besides Cornish x don't exactly live that long normally
I have wide boards in all my coops and 2x4's do work well, I agree, but for this group I have decided to not use a "perch" but DH says he will build nest boxes with extra sturdy tops so they can sit on top of them, That gets them off the floor and will allow then to keep their feet warm too. I will just have to scrap the tops off every day so they aren't sitting in poo...Definitely a roost with what we find is best for chickens...a 2 x 4 laying on its side..so they can perch on the 4 inch top, nestle down over their feet to keep them warm in frigid weather. Last two years of these uber chilled Michigan winters and all my birds have nary a foot/toe issue we are glad to report. We put ours so the sleeping birds would not be near a draft from the windows. So I would guess high enough they could climb on and off without jumping should do the trick at minimum.