GreyhoundGuy
Chirping
Hi all. I'm looking for some advice on a quick and easy coop.
We started with our hens a bit over a year. It's been a tough bit, as we've lost three. We lost two to a hawk a few months ago, and we just lost a gal to heat exhaustion a couple weekends ago. (That one was tough, as it was our daughter's chicken.
) We only have two gals left.
There's a person on Nextdoor that is giving away five hens, all of which he says are healthy and happy girls. We are first in line and are going to see them on Saturday morning. If we'd like all five, we can have that opportunity. We'd LOVE to have more girls in our flock, but we want to make sure we have a place for them.
The coop / run we have now will need to be replaced. It was tight when we had our five original hens, so we know it won't be able to hold seven. We picked up a cedar run and framed together a "tunnel" that links the two together so that the girls can have more wiggle room. They can stay under their coop in the original run, or walk through the tunnel into the extra run. BUT for seven hens, it's just not realistic.
So... what can I put together for a fairly quick design that will accommodate seven hens AND be able to be integrated into a future design, but yet be quick enough for me to put together on Saturday and have ready for the new hens as a quarantine area. (I'm assuming I'll need to quarantine, yes?)
I'm thinking of 4x8 sheets of plywood for a base and top to a coop, as well as 4x8 plywood for the side walls (with 4x4 plywood for the ends). I'm thinking of raising this up on 4x4 posts, most likely 2 or 3 feet off the ground. I'd attach a 10 or 12 foot run off the end so that they have some place to wander, but still stay safe while they acclimate to us. Hardware cloth or chicken wire all around, I'm sure.
So... if this was you, is this the route you'd take, or would you go another way? We don't have a lot of money to make a brand new coop like we want, but I'm hoping to take the materials from this quick-and-easy coop and use it in the future coop.
Okay, enough babbling. Let me know your thoughts.
Thanks all. You're fantastic!!
-Joel
We started with our hens a bit over a year. It's been a tough bit, as we've lost three. We lost two to a hawk a few months ago, and we just lost a gal to heat exhaustion a couple weekends ago. (That one was tough, as it was our daughter's chicken.

There's a person on Nextdoor that is giving away five hens, all of which he says are healthy and happy girls. We are first in line and are going to see them on Saturday morning. If we'd like all five, we can have that opportunity. We'd LOVE to have more girls in our flock, but we want to make sure we have a place for them.
The coop / run we have now will need to be replaced. It was tight when we had our five original hens, so we know it won't be able to hold seven. We picked up a cedar run and framed together a "tunnel" that links the two together so that the girls can have more wiggle room. They can stay under their coop in the original run, or walk through the tunnel into the extra run. BUT for seven hens, it's just not realistic.
So... what can I put together for a fairly quick design that will accommodate seven hens AND be able to be integrated into a future design, but yet be quick enough for me to put together on Saturday and have ready for the new hens as a quarantine area. (I'm assuming I'll need to quarantine, yes?)
I'm thinking of 4x8 sheets of plywood for a base and top to a coop, as well as 4x8 plywood for the side walls (with 4x4 plywood for the ends). I'm thinking of raising this up on 4x4 posts, most likely 2 or 3 feet off the ground. I'd attach a 10 or 12 foot run off the end so that they have some place to wander, but still stay safe while they acclimate to us. Hardware cloth or chicken wire all around, I'm sure.
So... if this was you, is this the route you'd take, or would you go another way? We don't have a lot of money to make a brand new coop like we want, but I'm hoping to take the materials from this quick-and-easy coop and use it in the future coop.
Okay, enough babbling. Let me know your thoughts.
Thanks all. You're fantastic!!
-Joel