Maximum coop elevation

What about flying predators? Would the chickens be able to get up to (hopefully) safety in a hurry if they found themselves in a threatening situation? Portable scaffolding would be safest for maneuverability & could be bolted to the structure while in use.
 
It occurs to me that I have seen some photos of elevated coops -- conversions of kids' outgrown playhouses/jungle gyms. They had stairs though.

I'm not sure how an electric fence would help. Are you thinking just around the base of the platform?

A few, well-placed hot wires are the easiest way to deter a wide variety of predators. If you have bears it's the only thing that really works.

So I'm trying to figure out if there is an obvious reason this won't work that we are overlooking.
I really think the maintenance part of it is going to be the downfall. Are you really able and willing to regularly lug up loads of bedding? Going up there daily in all sorts of weather to clean out, bring up food, fetch eggs?

That was exactly my thoughts. The daily work of chickens doesn't take a day off for adverse weather, illness, etc. Collecting eggs on a ladder isn't so bad in nice weather in the summer, but looks different in a blizzard.

The use of Deep Bedding can reduce the frequency of cleaning, but I hauled away two full Gorilla carts yesterday from a 16 square foot coop and it makes a lot more work to have to shovel it out onto the ground then shovel it up into the cart from the ground.

Given my northern location with sub freezing weather I think I will need a completely enclosed and insulated coop.

Actually, no. :)

If you have adequate ventilation then insulation really doesn't do much. Chickens tolerate cold wonderfully well as long as there is adequate ventilation to keep them dry (they give off a lot of moisture through their breath and their poop).

This is BYC's definitive article on cold-weather chicken keeping: https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/cold-weather-poultry-housing-and-care.72010/
 
I really think the maintenance part of it is going to be the downfall. Are you really able and willing to regularly lug up loads of bedding? Going up there daily in all sorts of weather to clean out, bring up food, fetch eggs?
But would the raised structure be a complete coop, or just a sleeping place?

Food, water, and nestboxes could be at ground level, if the chickens are always free to come out of the coop at will.

And if the coop is ONLY for sleeping, then of course the chickens will poop while sleeping, but they won't track is around much. So it might work to just spread newspapers or cardboard on the floor, let it pile up, and remove the whole mess once or twice a year. (Probably only feasible if the climate is dry enough and the ventilation is good enough for each night's poop to dry before the next night.)


Skipping some the of the walls is an interesting idea. Given my northern location with sub freezing weather I think I will need a completely enclosed and insulated coop.

Or maybe build something sort-of like a gazebo or covered porch: posts with a roof on top. Make the posts climb-proof, and let the chickens use the rafters as roosts. That way they could sleep 6+ feet up, could fly up and down, the poop could fall all the way to the ground where it's easy to clean up. If the chickens are up inside the roof structure, they are protected from the top and the sides, so it's probably good enough even in most cold climates.

And then put the food, water, and nests somewhere nearby but not underneath the roosts, because you don't want predators using them to get up to where the chickens are sleeping. But everything could be at ground level for easy tending, and you'd only need a ladder if you want to grab chickens off the roosts at night.
 
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