Ingenuity in the Coop - Retrofits

RcoM

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I wanted to start a thread sharing all the good ideas people have which use simple items to improve their coops or brooder boxes in various ways for various reasons.

For example, I just read about a guy whose brooder box is in a cart! Great idea! Wheel in or out at any time.

I myself used stick on Velcro to add curtains to the steel coop nest boxes and A4 display stands with black paper as nest box dividers.

Last night I was looking to block under the door of an old unused coop for a new broody so that mice didn't eat her eggs. I thought and thought and ended up cutting a pool noodle which squished in nicely. Bait now sits out in front as a deterrent too.

An old printers blanket makes a great insulating rubber roof blanket too.

Milk crates are great stand alone perches or ladders.

Bricks do a lot for me-elevating food, steadying various items, pinning removable shade cloth down.

So whatever you innovated or thought of as a solution, or tried and loved, please share!

Below are the nest box dividers and Velcro repositionable curtains.
 

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Great idea!

My tips are merely how we recently dealt with having so many chicks of different ages and ran out of feeders and waterers.

This summer, I hatched over 500 silkies, and though we sold most, I kept a couple here and there, and as of last week, I added about another two dozen, with 3 or 4 of them one age, then the next age was a week older, and so on.

They all already knew how to use vertical nipple bottles from being in the brooder, so we rounded up a few more bottles and gave them those in the outdoor pens.

Plastic peanut butter lids make great mash servers for the little ones.
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There are actually two nipple bottles in this pen. This will work until winter. Then we use an aquarium heater plugged into a Thermo Cube, and put in an ice cream pail of water. Other areas we have the electric nipple buckets.
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For the feeders, I found I'd saved a couple old vinegar and bleach jugs in the basement. I cut a opening in the side, then wired the handle to the fence so they couldn't tip it over. Vinegar bottles work better because they're see-through, and you can tell when feed is getting low.
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Those jugs and plastic coffee cans make great feeders for ducks too. They both are attached to the wall of the coop so they stay put.
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