New Coop, Need help on inside design

jaykhjr

Hatching
Jun 21, 2018
7
8
9
Hey everyone, I just built a new coop. Lean-to style. 12' long and 8' wide. about 11' high at the tall side and 8' tall at the low side.

ventilation and 2 2'x2' windows. with a 36x80 door on the 8' side.

I want to make the most of the space. I plan to have a nursery in there as well. How high is too high for roosts? How many nest boxes?

I have 18 chicks and 6 adult hens.

Thanks!
 
Hey everyone, I just built a new coop. Lean-to style. 12' long and 8' wide. about 11' high at the tall side and 8' tall at the low side.

ventilation and 2 2'x2' windows. with a 36x80 door on the 8' side.

I want to make the most of the space. I plan to have a nursery in there as well. How high is too high for roosts? How many nest boxes?

I have 18 chicks and 6 adult hens.

Thanks!
Click on the My Coop link in my avatar. It will open my article on my coop build.
Go to the design page and there's a sketch of my layout that includes a built-in brooder, heights for poop boards and roosts, etc.
 
94118877_10222441254680607_5556878010969227264_o.jpg
93153261_10222357843955391_682905374931550208_o.jpg
 
Click on the My Coop link in my avatar. It will open my article on my coop build.
Go to the design page and there's a sketch of my layout that includes a built-in brooder, heights for poop boards and roosts, etc.

Thank you! Your coop is awesome! Mine is slightly smaller, but I like the L-shaped roost. Do you think I would be ok making 2 levels of roost? My mechanic has roosts from 3' to 8' high in his coop, and he has no issues, but I also see people recommend keeping them lower to avoid injury.
 
people recommend keeping them lower to avoid injury.

I can see two different factors here. If you have large breeds and feed them in a way to make them really big for their breed, they may have problems with leg injuries if they hop down. This is a real issue for many people that breed for show, they get rewarded for meeting certain weights with their birds, typically weights heavier than hatchery birds get on "normal" feed. Some people like to feed their birds a rich diet so they can get big. I don't feed mine that way and don't have any issues with my full-sized fowl birds flying up or down from my 5' high roosts.

The other potential issue is that the higher the roost the more clear ground they need to land. In your coop that shouldn't be a big problem but watch where you put any waterers, feeders, nests, brooders, and such.

How many nest boxes?

For 24 hens I'd go with 6 nests. They probably won't use all of them, especially all the time, but you need a number and that will be enough.

I plan to have a nursery in there as well

I assume this means brooder. I'll show what I did. The brooder fits under my roosts with the top acting as a droppings board.
Brooder Bins.JPG


Then you have my juvenile roost. It's a horrible design but that's what I get fro it being an afterthought.. I integrate a lot of young chickens and they don't sleep on the main roosts with my adults until they mature, so they were sleeping in my nests. I put this roost over my nests to give then a place to go that was higher than the nests but safe from the adults. The top of my nests are droppings boards but are a pain to scrape. If I had it to do again I'd put a flat droppings boar all the way across.
Juvenile Roost.JPG
 
people recommend keeping them lower to avoid injury.

I can see two different factors here. If you have large breeds and feed them in a way to make them really big for their breed, they may have problems with leg injuries if they hop down. This is a real issue for many people that breed for show, they get rewarded for meeting certain weights with their birds, typically weights heavier than hatchery birds get on "normal" feed. Some people like to feed their birds a rich diet so they can get big. I don't feed mine that way and don't have any issues with my full-sized fowl birds flying up or down from my 5' high roosts.

The other potential issue is that the higher the roost the more clear ground they need to land. In your coop that shouldn't be a big problem but watch where you put any waterers, feeders, nests, brooders, and such.

How many nest boxes?

For 24 hens I'd go with 6 nests. They probably won't use all of them, especially all the time, but you need a number and that will be enough.

I plan to have a nursery in there as well

I assume this means brooder. I'll show what I did. The brooder fits under my roosts with the top acting as a droppings board.
View attachment 2100695

Then you have my juvenile roost. It's a horrible design but that's what I get fro it being an afterthought.. I integrate a lot of young chickens and they don't sleep on the main roosts with my adults until they mature, so they were sleeping in my nests. I put this roost over my nests to give then a place to go that was higher than the nests but safe from the adults. The top of my nests are droppings boards but are a pain to scrape. If I had it to do again I'd put a flat droppings boar all the way across.
View attachment 2100702
Thanks! My brooder (nursery) is a wire mesh job box from a construction site. Ill post pictures later on if the weather gets better here. I plan to put that under the roosts and use the lid as a droppings board. I may stagger roosts at 3', 4' and 5' as I dont have any show birds or meat birds, I just keep chickens for the eggs and I enjoy having them run around the yard.
 
people recommend keeping them lower to avoid injury.

I can see two different factors here. If you have large breeds and feed them in a way to make them really big for their breed, they may have problems with leg injuries if they hop down. This is a real issue for many people that breed for show, they get rewarded for meeting certain weights with their birds, typically weights heavier than hatchery birds get on "normal" feed. Some people like to feed their birds a rich diet so they can get big. I don't feed mine that way and don't have any issues with my full-sized fowl birds flying up or down from my 5' high roosts.

The other potential issue is that the higher the roost the more clear ground they need to land. In your coop that shouldn't be a big problem but watch where you put any waterers, feeders, nests, brooders, and such.

How many nest boxes?

For 24 hens I'd go with 6 nests. They probably won't use all of them, especially all the time, but you need a number and that will be enough.

I plan to have a nursery in there as well

I assume this means brooder. I'll show what I did. The brooder fits under my roosts with the top acting as a droppings board.
View attachment 2100695

Then you have my juvenile roost. It's a horrible design but that's what I get fro it being an afterthought.. I integrate a lot of young chickens and they don't sleep on the main roosts with my adults until they mature, so they were sleeping in my nests. I put this roost over my nests to give then a place to go that was higher than the nests but safe from the adults. The top of my nests are droppings boards but are a pain to scrape. If I had it to do again I'd put a flat droppings boar all the way across.
View attachment 2100702
My brooder
2020-04-22 16.26.15.jpg
 

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