New coop, small, street legal :P

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sailtexas186548

Chirping
Apr 12, 2020
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The wife has four chicks coming on Saturday so over the last few weekends I threw a coop together. Like all good projects it got out of hand quick!

We live on Clear Lake (south of Houston), our yard is 5 or 6 feet above sea level so every few years we get a foot or two of water in the yard, and hurricane evacuations are all too frequent. Obviously a coop/run on the ground would be an issue, and chickens in the house or car doesn’t sound great. I have a garage (metal building) on high Ground a few miles away, so the natural solution was a coop I could move easily.

We only want a few chickens (for now! ha), so a small 4’x4’ coop and an 8x10 run, on a trailer, with max height less than 12’ fit the bill.

I was going to start with a 7x10 low-boy trailer, but that was really too much trailer for how little it will be moved around, and not cheap. Instead I picked up a 1200lb capacity trailer from harbor freight for a few hundred bucks

I built a pressure treated wood platform to serve as a run floor, started
some 2x6 and 2x10 boards lagged down to the trailer frame.

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from there I threw some concepts together

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used the model to get a materials list together then started building. I used 1/2 PT CDX for the run floor, and t25 drive 3” coated deck screws and 2x4 studs for 99% of the rest of the wood structure.

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then I put three sides on the coop (4’x4’x4’) using LP SmartSide to match my house, and some roof framing for a hip roof at a 12:12 pitch

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I continued with the lower roof framing, not really following proper framing techniques but I was trying to keep it as light weight as possible and minimize the areas I would have to seal up from predators

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i was going to put external nest boxes on, but in the process of building a poop board support I ended up with some 12”x14”x12” boxes, I figured why not see if they like/use them, if not I can add some external boxes pretty easily.

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Added the roost and poop board, also cut a pop door in. The run is going to be built very secure, and it is very warm here so no closable pop door yet, probably add one in the fall

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Built a door and a simple latch:

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Also added a ramp from the run to the coop, just some scrap LP SmartSide and plywood cleats:

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since the run isn’t tall enough to walk in, I added doors running the full length on both 10’ sides, again with simple block latches:

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Then the lengthy and irritating process that is installing hardware cloth.I used galvanized 19ga. 1/2 stuff. I secured it with Coated 1” deck screws and 1.25” fender washers every 6” or less. Since it is so hot here I put 8 square feet of soffit venting on the coop that will be hidden under the eaves

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I started putting 29ga galvanized roofing panels on, made my own hip caps with extra panel, and the cap vent (four, 4” holes up top with hardware cloth, there is also venting under the length of the hip caps to let more heat out).

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started on the lower roof but ran out of screws

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a few more roof screws, trim, ramp down to the yard, some paint, dirt/sand in the run and bedding in the coop and it’s done and functional for now. I also intend to build some gravity auto feeders, and put Gutters into a rain barrel for some chicken nipples over the next few weeks. The area below the coop door will house those things, and a bin directly below the door to scrape/clean the coop into and then compost or trash the waste.

The final thing to do is put the trailer lights on , and get a license plate! Of course the coop will get some 6x6 or 8x8 blocks at the corners and under the Axle so it isn’t supported by the tires, but it will be ready to roll up into the garage at the house for minor floods or tropical storms, and up to the big garage for a major storm.

I will update this thread as I put the finishing touches on the coop, hopefully it is tight enough to kee the raccoons, gators, and other predators out!
 
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a Christmas coop!

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We are almost to 100 eggs! Our austrawhite popeye is laying 6 a week, both polishes Derek and Hansel are laying 2 a week, and our silkie is somehow cranking out 4 a week! Jelly the easter egger hasn’t laid yet, that we can tell at least.

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Training is going better than expected! (We live at the end of a dead end street so no traffic to worry about!)

 
I got the rest of the roof on, corner flashing, cold galv. Paint on the cut edges and screws, cleaned out, and moved into its final position. Going to get it up on blocks and build some raised garden beds to hide the trailer this weekend.

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I have looked At some window options to install on the coop, I have a Few weeks to figure out the best spot for them so they are effective and look decent. Need to build a ramp to the yard also, and a closable pop door.

chicks are home!

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Well after putting these Girls on the roost in the coop every night, tonight they finally went Into The coop On their own - sweet success!

also the sickly polish has gotten over whatever she had and is doing well. still very thin but is eating/drinking/pooping normal and seems to be growing. She Was alone In The brooder the last week incase she was contagious, and somehow squeezed out and was flying around the garage all day! Poop everywhere hahaha what a mess. Back in the coop with the rest tomorrow

not chick related but I planted 3 lemon trees you can see along the fence line. We plan to let the girls free range the yard, waiting until the are too big to fit though the fence to let them out for the first time. Probably need to wait for them to get good at going into the coop at night too so they know where home is.

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And another tropical storm/ hurricane looms near! Don’t think we need to move the coop this time but we will see how it plays out...

more importantly, we got egg #1 today!!! In the nest box Too! We are pretty sure Derek the sickly/runt polish thatwe nursed back to health laid it since she was making all kinds of racket (egg song I suppose) This afternoon in the coop while the rest were out free ranging

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Well except paint and some ergonomic tweaks for the chickens it’s done, will paint to match the house this week. Trailer is on blocks, detachable tounge removed, and tires are in the garage so they don’t rot out in the elements. Probably 45min to get it ready to roll when (not if) it needs to move. It was a lot of extra work up front But I will be glad it’s mobile when the next hurricane is spooling up in the gulf

I also built a couple raised beds and added drip irrigation. Ran a water line to the coop also so I can set up auto watering

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