Nest Boxes

I am in the process on designing my chicken coop and I have a couple of questions regarding nest boxes. I plan on eventually having about 30 hens. Is it necessary to have a separate nesting box for each hen or how many nest boxes would be appropriate for this number of hens? How far off the ground should the nest boxes be? How large should the opening on a nest box be? Any feedback will be greatly appreciated.
 
Is it necessary to have a separate nesting box for each hen or how many nest boxes would be appropriate for this number of hens?
1 nest for every 3-5 layers.

How far off the ground should the nest boxes be?
Lower than the roosts, and easily accessible for both birds and keeper. Will add this here again:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/coop-stack-up-how-high-stuff-works-well.73427/

How large should the opening on a nest box be?
I like my 14x14x16 nests with a 10" diam entrance.
Click on this pic to see other nest pics:
 
A rule of thumb given on here are that the nests should each be a minimum of 12" x 12" x 12". If your nests are this size you need one nest for every four hens. Larger nests will hold more hens. Mine are 16" x 16" x 16" and I have no problems with 5 hens per nest. Some people use what are called community nests. If built right a community nest 2' x 4' can supposedly handle 24 hens but these are just for flocks that are for only laying eggs. They are not suitable if you want a broody hen to hatch eggs. Or you can build a roll-away nest. This is where the eggs roll out of the nest to a collection area that the chickens cannot get to, very useful if you have an egg-eater or are collecting a lot of eggs commercially. There is no one rule for size or how many, it kind of depends on what you are using the nests for. Typically you will find most of your eggs in just a few nests, they don't get used evenly. They seem to like to lay in the same nests. Still it's better to err by providing too many than too few.

My only rule for how high the nests should be is that they are lower than the roosts. Chickens tend to sleep in the highest spot available. If your roosts are higher than nests and you have enough roosts they usually don't sleep in nests. They poop while they sleep, not a good thing for clean eggs if they sleep in nests.

Some people put the nests on the floor. Set a milk crate or box down, fill it with bedding, fix it so the chickens won't turn it over when they perch on the side, and they are good to go. Other people put the nests high enough that they don't have to bend over to gather eggs, helpful if you have a bad back. Mine are in between. My suggestion is to make it convenient for you. People tend to care about height a lot more than the chickens do.

You need enough of a lip around the bottom of the nest to hold the bedding in. They tend to scratch when adjusting the bedding before they lay. If the lip is too low they can scratch bedding, fake eggs, or real egg out.

I've had full sized fowl hens (not bantams) use a nest with an opening height of 6" when I had to raise a lip to stop them from scratching stuff out. That's fairly tight but they used it. I try to give hem an 8" high and 8" wide opening. That just looks better. And if it looks right it usually is.

Some people will tell you that the nest has to be dark for the hen to use it, going as far as putting curtains on the nests to make it dark. I've had hens use a cat litter bucket with an open top. Many people use milk crates with an open top. Not dark at all. They do tend to want to hide a nest but what makes a nest look hidden to a chicken may look pretty wide open to me. I think shadows on the coop floor can sometimes make them think the nest is hidden.

That cat litter bucket I used had a top opening of 7-1/2" x 11-1/2", well below the minimum of 12". Hens used it and laid in it fine, but one time I let a broody hen hatch chicks in it. That did not work out well. The first chicks that hatch often like to climb up on top of Mama while they are waiting on the late ones. She was sitting so close to the edge of that bucket that when the chicks fell off they missed the nest and fell about four feet to the floor. Four different times I picked up a chick and put it back in the nest with Mama. They were not hurt falling four feet, by the way. But I retired that nest after the hatch was over. If the nest had been 12" the hen would be unlikely to be that near an edge. I'm mentioning this to show that there are plenty of exceptions to any rule of thumb we mention on here. They will use nests smaller than the minimum I mentioned, but there may be other reasons those rules of thumb are here.

The reason I used 16" for my nests is that if you cut an 8' long 2x4 or a 4x8 sheet of plywood into 12' or 16" pieces it comes out even, no waste. My stud framing was 16" so that made building 16" nests easy. I like easy.

These old threads show how some of us have made nests. You can build them from scratch but people have used pieces of furniture, buckets, someone even used a kitchen sink. There are no rules where there is just one right answer. Lots of different things can work.

Nest boxes

http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/41108/show-us-your-nest-boxes-ingenous-design-post-it-here/220

Nest Boxes

http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/4...-your-creative-nesting-boxes/80#post_12395882

Opa’s Rollaway Nest Box

http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=287684

Since people tend to like photos I'll show what I did for mine. That 2x4 above them is my juvenile roost which gives my juveniles a safe place to roost away from the adults on the main roosts. The juvenile roost was a late addition, higher than the nests to stop them from sleeping in the nests. The tops of my nests became a droppings board but it's so broken up it is not a good design.

Nests.JPG
 
Conventional visdom says one nest box per 4 or 5 hens (some sources say per 3 or 4 hens). That would add up to 6 or 7 boxes for your 30 hens. If you were building 7, it might be just as easy to build 8, with an upper and a lower row of 4 each.
For a smaller flock , I would tend to go with even more than 3 or 4 nest boxes per hen bcause they do tend to lay at the same time of day; and with, let's say, just 2 or 3 nest boxes, it would not be hard for every box to get filled up. (You don't want a second hen trying to enter the same nest, or a hen to go looking for someplace else to lay.) With just 5 (or fewer) hens laying, I've stil found 2 out of 3 nesting boxes occupied lots of times.
Two other things -- small flocks often become bigger, and an extra nest box can come in handy for storage if the hens really don't need it.
Outside access for egg collecting is highly recommended.
I've been making the entrances to my nest boxes as rounded triangles or trapezoids -- narrower at the top so they will be a bit darker. A chicken is narrower at the head than at the feet.
Wooden eggs or golf balls do encourage them to lay where you'd like them to. With 3 nests, I've tried having a wooden egg in one, a golf ball in another, and nothing (but bedding) in a third -- and switching those three things around every day. I found that the birds slightly prefer the wooden egg over the golf ball, and strongly prefer either over a nest with just bedding.
 
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A rule of thumb given on here are that the nests should each be a minimum of 12" x 12" x 12". If your nests are this size you need one nest for every four hens. Larger nests will hold more hens. Mine are 16" x 16" x 16" and I have no problems with 5 hens per nest. Some people use what are called community nests. If built right a community nest 2' x 4' can supposedly handle 24 hens but these are just for flocks that are for only laying eggs. They are not suitable if you want a broody hen to hatch eggs. Or you can build a roll-away nest. This is where the eggs roll out of the nest to a collection area that the chickens cannot get to, very useful if you have an egg-eater or are collecting a lot of eggs commercially. There is no one rule for size or how many, it kind of depends on what you are using the nests for. Typically you will find most of your eggs in just a few nests, they don't get used evenly. They seem to like to lay in the same nests. Still it's better to err by providing too many than too few.

My only rule for how high the nests should be is that they are lower than the roosts. Chickens tend to sleep in the highest spot available. If your roosts are higher than nests and you have enough roosts they usually don't sleep in nests. They poop while they sleep, not a good thing for clean eggs if they sleep in nests.

Some people put the nests on the floor. Set a milk crate or box down, fill it with bedding, fix it so the chickens won't turn it over when they perch on the side, and they are good to go. Other people put the nests high enough that they don't have to bend over to gather eggs, helpful if you have a bad back. Mine are in between. My suggestion is to make it convenient for you. People tend to care about height a lot more than the chickens do.

You need enough of a lip around the bottom of the nest to hold the bedding in. They tend to scratch when adjusting the bedding before they lay. If the lip is too low they can scratch bedding, fake eggs, or real egg out.

I've had full sized fowl hens (not bantams) use a nest with an opening height of 6" when I had to raise a lip to stop them from scratching stuff out. That's fairly tight but they used it. I try to give hem an 8" high and 8" wide opening. That just looks better. And if it looks right it usually is.

Some people will tell you that the nest has to be dark for the hen to use it, going as far as putting curtains on the nests to make it dark. I've had hens use a cat litter bucket with an open top. Many people use milk crates with an open top. Not dark at all. They do tend to want to hide a nest but what makes a nest look hidden to a chicken may look pretty wide open to me. I think shadows on the coop floor can sometimes make them think the nest is hidden.

That cat litter bucket I used had a top opening of 7-1/2" x 11-1/2", well below the minimum of 12". Hens used it and laid in it fine, but one time I let a broody hen hatch chicks in it. That did not work out well. The first chicks that hatch often like to climb up on top of Mama while they are waiting on the late ones. She was sitting so close to the edge of that bucket that when the chicks fell off they missed the nest and fell about four feet to the floor. Four different times I picked up a chick and put it back in the nest with Mama. They were not hurt falling four feet, by the way. But I retired that nest after the hatch was over. If the nest had been 12" the hen would be unlikely to be that near an edge. I'm mentioning this to show that there are plenty of exceptions to any rule of thumb we mention on here. They will use nests smaller than the minimum I mentioned, but there may be other reasons those rules of thumb are here.

The reason I used 16" for my nests is that if you cut an 8' long 2x4 or a 4x8 sheet of plywood into 12' or 16" pieces it comes out even, no waste. My stud framing was 16" so that made building 16" nests easy. I like easy.

These old threads show how some of us have made nests. You can build them from scratch but people have used pieces of furniture, buckets, someone even used a kitchen sink. There are no rules where there is just one right answer. Lots of different things can work.

Nest boxes

http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/41108/show-us-your-nest-boxes-ingenous-design-post-it-here/220

Nest Boxes

http://www.backyardchickens.com/t/4...-your-creative-nesting-boxes/80#post_12395882

Opa’s Rollaway Nest Box

http://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=287684

Since people tend to like photos I'll show what I did for mine. That 2x4 above them is my juvenile roost which gives my juveniles a safe place to roost away from the adults on the main roosts. The juvenile roost was a late addition, higher than the nests to stop them from sleeping in the nests. The tops of my nests became a droppings board but it's so broken up it is not a good design.

View attachment 1998084
Very informative thank you😊
 

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