New to the club!

adstevens

In the Brooder
Dec 2, 2019
9
32
41
Hello,

My husband and I finally decided we will be getting some chickens, for the 1st time ever, this coming spring. We have a son in 4H and I have also been wanting to raise some for a while. I have no idea where to start as I have never owned chickens before.
 
:welcome
Start by finding your state thread. They will help you to decide how many chickens, goats, turkey, ducks and quail you can get the first year. Mini cows are the second year.
:D They really will help with that, but also they can help you decide where to get the supplies, eggs/chicks/layers, and how to prepare for the seasons. For example, hawks have been crazy this past year in many locations, but rarely in the past. I could have saved more of my birds if I’d paid attention to my own state thread.
Building a coop first is your choice. It’s more fun to have to beat the clock on getting the chicks out of the brooder. Always build bigger. Spend the extra money on hardware cloth.
 
:welcome
Start by finding your state thread. They will help you to decide how many chickens, goats, turkey, ducks and quail you can get the first year. Mini cows are the second year.
:D They really will help with that, but also they can help you decide where to get the supplies, eggs/chicks/layers, and how to prepare for the seasons. For example, hawks have been crazy this past year in many locations, but rarely in the past. I could have saved more of my birds if I’d paid attention to my own state thread.
Building a coop first is your choice. It’s more fun to have to beat the clock on getting the chicks out of the brooder. Always build bigger. Spend the extra money on hardware cloth.
Thank you
 
I would start with the biggest,best,safest coop you are able to build. I wouldn't buy one. There are a lot of good suggestions and plans in the coop design and maintenance forum. Then, I would suggest easy starter birds. For me that would be Buff Orpingtons. Buy where they will assure you they are all pullets (female).

And welcome to BYC!
 
Hello and welcome to BYC! :frow Glad you joined.
Plan for where you want your coop and make sure it never had standing water in that site. I always recommend running a circuit out to the coop. It helps to have power to the coop in so many ways.
Do not make the mistake of building to the minimum space recommendations. It is not enough room.
If you plan to add new pullets each spring, consider a built-in brooder in your coop. I am not over of the many enablers here. Get only what you can properly care for.
You've got the whole winter to plan your coop/run and can then break ground in the spring.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom