Ladies of the Forest
Songster
- Apr 10, 2019
- 82
- 179
- 103
Hi, I just wanted to comment about putting heavy things, like pavers and rocks around the base of your trees. This isn’t a good idea, if you really want your trees to survive, as it compacts the soil, making it harder for nutrients, water, and air to get to you’re trees’ roots. It’ll take a few years for them to die, but you can’t reverse the damage, once it’s done. Good luck with your project. I have high hopes for you.Thank you @DobieLover for your reply! I just read your coop page. Wow, how have I not seen this until now! It's amazing. So detailed and well written, fun to read, and what a professional job you've done. Your setup is beautiful! I really enjoyed reading about Fabio and the babies, too.
I had a feeling I might end up needing to dig holes. I was really hoping to avoid it, but I don't want the structure to collapse... And not just because of the lead, though that's reason #1. Another reason is because our soil is extremely rocky. I dug some holes to plant trees a few years ago (I know, the lead... but I wanted trees damnit, haha), and about half the volume I dug out was rocks. Major pain in the butt and so exhausting! I'm very intrigued by idea of post anchors though. I did not know they existed. If I used this kind:
View attachment 2027354
instead of digging and pouring concrete, would that be enough? Will the rocky soil be a problem? I can rent a jackhammer so I don't bust myself hammering them in by hand.
No no no, I never intended to build the structure out of the panels alone! There will definitely be a free-standing wooden structure and they'll be attached to it. I was just wondering, since they will offer *some* support (unlike HC), will that give me leeway to maybe space the vertical supports farther, or use 2x4 instead of 4x4, or something like that. Basically, do I earn anything in terms of support because I'm using these panels and not floppy HC...
Ah, now I see what you both meant by the angled wall. Yes, that would make things easier indeed. I was just going for "more is better" and trying to eek out every square foot I could for the chickensBut I guess the run will already be big enough, so I'll get rid of the angled section.
I really don't want it to die thoughIt would make a great hiding spot for the chickens, especially on hot days. It's nice and shady under it. And it's probably the only piece of vegetation I have that might survive coexisting with the chickens. I can put down rocks or pavers near the base if they start digging there, or put down HC, to protect its roots. And also, if I get rid of the angled wall, the roof won't extend so far out in front of the bush and it will still get rainwater pretty close by in the front, so hopefully that will help.
Thank you both for your comments! This is really helpful and I'm already reworking the design. I will get rid of the angled wall and cover the whole run permanently (hoping the bush lives). Do let me know what you think about using post anchors instead of concrete footers. And how far apart my vertical supports will need to be.
