Inside the coop- THE REAL DEAL :D

kjpuggles3

In the Brooder
8 Years
Oct 24, 2011
41
0
32
Hi! SEND PICS OF YOUR AMAZING COOPS- FROM THE INSIDE! Im looking forward to getting my first cute batch of baby chickens (YAY!!!!).
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So, i want to know if i can built the coop as an extention from my barn (no animals in it save a friendly dog who will be trained not to harm and maybe a cow) I was looking at the barn and it had a small shed that had kind of fallen apart attached to it open on the inside. Can i patch it up, add air slits and ample light? How many nesting boxes should i have and where? How many beds? Where do chickens sleep??? See, i told you i was new at this
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Can you post pics of the inside of your coops? Im very excited and I plan to have 10-20 hens in New England. (brrrrrr chilly)

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BABY CHICKS COMING SOON!!!
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*Yes, master chicken*
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-k
 
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Hi, Wow! Lots of questions. Welcome to BYC. Just a suggestion.....go to learning center tab and read about the basics, then go to coop designs and look at coops folks have built. Then ya might have alot of answers to your questions.
erik
 
Sure you can fix up the attached shed. That should be fairly easy actually since the basic stucture is already there. You need to make sure nothing, and I mean NOTHING can get in when the chickens are closed up for the night, IE coons, possums, skunks, dogs, anything.

You need 2x4 roosts. Chickens roost. Put some high, some lower, With 10-20 hens, then you need about 4-5 nest boxes. Best to have side open nest boxes, cuz some chickens will perch on open top nest boxes and poop in them. OR, you could have open top nest boxes but have a roof/shelf that goes over the top that the chickens can sit on and will catch poop instead, but I'd opt for side opne boxes. 5gallon plastic tote work nice. Leave the lids on, and cut a nice hole in the side that the girls can get in and out of, it'll keep eggs clean.

If using lights, make sure they have NO TEFLON. Teflon emits gasses that hurt the chickens/birds lungs.

If you can put windows in that open and close, do that.

If you have a cements floor, thats cool, cuz then nothing can dig under the wall and get in. If its an earthen floor, be sure to make sure nothing can dig under the walls to get it.

Use sand for the floors, or do a deep litter method.

How old are the chicks going to be? You will probably need to brood the chickes for several weeks with heat lamps. If they are already in coops, say 10-12 weeks, you could just put them strait to the new coops. They should feather out pretty good before winter comes. You don't need to heat the coop really. If they are old enough they should be fine, they will huddle together. If you heat the coop, they will get used to that, and if you have a power outage, you risk losing them because they didn't develop a winter feathering. My girls now seem to be getting a nice set of feathers.

Make sure you dust the coop for mites/flees/lice before you put your new birds in it. IF its an older barn, you risk those if you haven't done it first. ITS A REAL WITCH to get rid of mites. Mites can impair your birds and can lead to deaths.

You need atleast 4sq feet per bird of coop floor space. Are you planning to free range or use a run? if you use a run, you need 10 sq ft per bird of run space.

I am going to suggest too, that you get an Everything chicken, or chickens for dummies and read it cover to cover before you get chickens.

Other than that, welcome to BYC, and so many people here are very very knowledgeable and will help and offer the best advice, better than any book. But its always good to do your homework before you actually have the birds.

Oh, and make sure you get a heated waterer for the winter so the water doesn't freeze.
 
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Hi from Oregon
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How many chicks are you thinking of for sure so lets think of Chicken Math and you will end up with 20+ cold region hens + Roo? That important bc a lot of the info will need some kind of boundary? The shed your speaking of, can you post a picture so we could get an idea of what it needs? Open on the inside meaning open to the barn inside but outside the barn? Im confused about that? Anything can be either taken a part and put back together strong or if it is fairly good to re-enforce it to be strong so no worries there. Beds are all based on how many birds but a lot of the hens will share boxes together so how many is not as important now but for planning call it 8 to 10 12X12X14. Must be very exciting you. Winter projects are fun
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good luck see you on the BYC.
 
Please post pictures of inside your coops so i can get an idea
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so pumped to build mine!!!
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Try and find this book on line or at a book store, it's great and really helped me.
"Storey's Guide To RAISING CHICKENS" Great book!

Bill

4 Ameraucana hens, 1 Black Star hen, 1 Blue Andalusian hen, 3 Golden Sebright hens and, 2 Silver Sebright Bantams 1 hen and 1 rooster. Not to mention my 2 yr old Boxer and wife's 2 Multipoo dogs.
 

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