New Member out of Lewisburg, TN

yungtan

In the Brooder
May 29, 2025
9
17
23
Hello! My name is Jacob, I have been in Lewisburg for almost 5 years now. I had 6 leghorns when I got here in 2020, they were allowed to free range and were locked in a horse stable at night. A pack of coyotes took 3 at around 2pm in november or december after learning that they would not be accessible after the evening hours. After that time they were no longer able to free range. I made a run for them and used buried welded wire around the bottom of the horse stable, they were still picked off 1 by 1 in february/march. I could not figure out how the predator was getting in. Fast forward to this year, I decided to give it another shot. Instead of egg layers I have opted for freedom ranger broilers from Freedom Ranger Hatchery in Pennsylvania. As we all know the chicken quality bought from the store is subpar and those chickens live miserable lives. The non-gmo, organic, pasture raised chicken is around $7-9+ per lb and my belief is that tractored rangers will be better quality than what can be bought in stores. I have a local grainery who sells 300lb drums of non gmo broiler feed for $115. I built a brooder that they have outgrown in 2 weeks. These birds can eat! This weekend I am building my chicken tractors, I have settled on a simple a-frame design by Ana White (the simple original version). I will attempt to add the link here.

https://www.ana-white.com/woodworking-projects/frame-chicken-coop-tractor

The design should cost about $100 per tractor, I will be running a portable electric fence in attempt to keep out most predators. Instead of chicken wire i will substitute 1/2" welded wire 19 guage. The design states that each tractor will have 40 square ft of run space and 10 sqf of roost space. I am trying to decide whether to just opt out of the roost box being that it will surely be filthy in no time, not to mention that the chickens would be crowded regardless of how many chickens i put in each tractor. What are yalls thoughts on this? For 50 chickens I was planning to build 3 of these tractors, that would give 120 square ft and move them daily, and 16 2/3 chickens in each tractor. Should I scrap the coop/lay box? should i make one side solid to the ground?

Tennessee summers can be brutal sometimes, the humidity makes things awfully miserable above about 95 degrees. Last years drought came with a heat wave around 95-105 with evenings only cooling to around 85, this was sustained for about 3-4 weeks. I am concerned about keeping the sun off of my chickens as well as i can, should i opt for a silver tarp instead of the 3/4" plywood?

I appreciate any opinions or advise in advance, yall have already been very helpful to me as I have been reading on this forum for months already. I hope yall have a great season and plentiful harvests!
 
Hello & Welcome to BYC!
Welcome Wagon.gif
It's great to have you here. So sorry about your chickens, predators absolutely suck.
Sorry I do not have any building experience or expertise, but I'm sure more folks who do will respond to your questions😊
 
Hello! My name is Jacob, I have been in Lewisburg for almost 5 years now. I had 6 leghorns when I got here in 2020, they were allowed to free range and were locked in a horse stable at night. A pack of coyotes took 3 at around 2pm in november or december after learning that they would not be accessible after the evening hours. After that time they were no longer able to free range. I made a run for them and used buried welded wire around the bottom of the horse stable, they were still picked off 1 by 1 in february/march. I could not figure out how the predator was getting in. Fast forward to this year, I decided to give it another shot. Instead of egg layers I have opted for freedom ranger broilers from Freedom Ranger Hatchery in Pennsylvania. As we all know the chicken quality bought from the store is subpar and those chickens live miserable lives. The non-gmo, organic, pasture raised chicken is around $7-9+ per lb and my belief is that tractored rangers will be better quality than what can be bought in stores. I have a local grainery who sells 300lb drums of non gmo broiler feed for $115. I built a brooder that they have outgrown in 2 weeks. These birds can eat! This weekend I am building my chicken tractors, I have settled on a simple a-frame design by Ana White (the simple original version). I will attempt to add the link here.

https://www.ana-white.com/woodworking-projects/frame-chicken-coop-tractor

The design should cost about $100 per tractor, I will be running a portable electric fence in attempt to keep out most predators. Instead of chicken wire i will substitute 1/2" welded wire 19 guage. The design states that each tractor will have 40 square ft of run space and 10 sqf of roost space. I am trying to decide whether to just opt out of the roost box being that it will surely be filthy in no time, not to mention that the chickens would be crowded regardless of how many chickens i put in each tractor. What are yalls thoughts on this? For 50 chickens I was planning to build 3 of these tractors, that would give 120 square ft and move them daily, and 16 2/3 chickens in each tractor. Should I scrap the coop/lay box? should i make one side solid to the ground?

Tennessee summers can be brutal sometimes, the humidity makes things awfully miserable above about 95 degrees. Last years drought came with a heat wave around 95-105 with evenings only cooling to around 85, this was sustained for about 3-4 weeks. I am concerned about keeping the sun off of my chickens as well as i can, should i opt for a silver tarp instead of the 3/4" plywood?

I appreciate any opinions or advise in advance, yall have already been very helpful to me as I have been reading on this forum for months already. I hope yall have a great season and plentiful harvests!
Hello! Welcome to BYC!
 
Hiya, Jacob, and welcome to BYC! :frow

I'll say that was a wise decision to go with 1/2" hardware cloth.

Chickens need 4 square feet per bird in their coop and 15 square feet in their run, unless they are bantams, in which case a smidge smaller is fine. Less than this, feather picking can start, and they may start having ailments.

You'll need one nest box for every four hens. More is just a waste of vital space.

I would post your questions in this forum too: https://www.backyardchickens.com/forums/coop-run-design-construction-maintenance.9/ There are some talented carpenters and some maybe not-so-talented folks who've built a lot of things for their poultry that can be very helpful.
 

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