Logistics - is a fully enclosed run necessary?

progressivehomesteader

In the Brooder
May 22, 2025
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5
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I have a coop without a run so we are constructing one ourselves. In our area (Long Island NY) there are lots of predators--raptors, racoons, possums, fox, etc.

My assumption is that hawks are the only thing I am worried about during daylight hours. If that is a good assumption, I feel like I do not need to wrap the run on the bottom with hardware cloth. Just the sides and top. The birds will get closed in their coop at night.

If I am wrong and the other predators pose a real risk in daylight, then I should wrap it in hardware cloth...right? Is it best to just wrap it anyway?
 
Welcome to BYC. The foxes here usually come at dusk, during the night, or at dawn, but in the last Month, for the first time in 15 years, I've seen them in broad daylight!

Where do you live?
 
I'm in New Hampshire, so we probably have similar types of wildlife. I've seen foxes hunting next to my chicken pen during the day. I used 6-inch heavy duty landscaping staples to attach a 24" hardware cloth skirt around the entire run. Most of it is covered with a garden box, decorative rocks, and weeds. It gives me peace of mind.
 
I’m in northeastern Pennsylvania. In town, tho sorta close to the edge.

We also see domestic feral cats, stray dogs, skunks, possums, foxes, raccoons on the camera and hear coyotes at night.

IMG_1736.jpeg
 
Sure you can do that. Might be ok for a while, even years perhaps - but that first time you go outside and feel the heartbreak when you see feathers everywhere and your favorite chickens dead or missing, you'll wish you just spent another $100-500 in whatever materials and invested another day of labor, to make things fully secured.

My 2nd run was fine for about 2yrs without overhead protection. Now it's fully secured. Known predators that got over the top were a great horn owl and bobcat
 
Foxes and bobcat absolutely hunt during the day, especially when they are feeding kits.

If you're thinking of covering the entire floor of the run with hardware cloth, don't do it. Chickens dig so could hurt their feet and galvanized hardware cloth rusts making it more dangerous and removing it a nightmare.

Go with a skirt around the outside instead and/or a strand or two of electric fencing. You don't need to dig down for the skirt. It can lay on the ground covered in dirt, mulch, or fine gravel, or you can let the grass grow through it.
 

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