Here is another question for you all - kind of on the same subject.
Do you guys use lights in the winter? I’m not too concerned about getting eggs. These birds are mostly pets with benefits. We actually just got our first egg this week - yea! So, I don’t care about using lights to force egg production - but I’m wondering if it’s good to let them just barely start laying eggs just to stop for the winter or for some of them to not even start until spring. I was thinking about putting patio lights up in the run just so they could have a few extra hours of daylight. It just seems like such a long night for them starting at 3:30 in the afternoon. Right now they are already putting themselves to bed at 5:30. I know patio lights do nothing for egg production, I just thought some extra hours to run around would be nice.
Wow, I’m so glad to find someone who is as invested in their feathered family as I am! Absolutely beautiful coop- you took time for sure.
Bear with me because I know you have had a lot of answers but I want to chime in with my personal notes. We all have our opinions/set-ups so you can just take what you want from them. My set-up has worked beautifully for 3 1/2 years so I’m very pleased with it.
I have 5 coops, custom-built, to meet my chickens’ and guineas’ needs for our climate and area. I have most 10x12’ but we also have a 16x16’ bigger one. I have a total of 1 rooster and 17 hens, with 2 guinea hens and 4 guinea guys living in their own coop. We live on top of a mountain, about 2200 feet up, so it gets considerably colder and windier than in the valleys. I still think you are colder in the winter because we rarely drop below zero but we do get up over 90 at times in the summer, which seems to be more frequent every year. Most importantly, living in the middle of nowhere and in a heavily forested area, we have predators and lots of them! Bears, coyotes, bobcats, a lone weasel, possums, huge hawks, etc. These were and still are a huge concern, especially as I won’t hurt any of my visitors- they have a right to live too and it’s my job to make it so difficult to take a run at my gu that they move on.
The coops are all made with tongue and groove pine walls, metal roofs, and electrical outlets inside. The roofs are lined with thin foam for an extra insulation factor and the small gaps between the roof grooves and the outer walls are filled with expandable foam to prevent any small creature entry. Each has three windows with screens lining one wall, a long locked and screened pull-down hatch on the opposite side, a door on one end near the roof peak with a grilled vent and a fan running in front of it to increase the ventilation factor and a run entrance through wooden latched doors (used to be the automatic but I had significant problems with them so I went back to low-tech) on the other end. There are multiple perches inside and an entire row of nesting boxes under the windows, accessible from inside and outside via a locked pull-up door. I made curtains to cover the boxes so they would have privacy, which significantly decreases their stress level when nesting. I also have red lighting that comes on at night, which doesn’t even register with them. While I have lights on the ceilings, I don’t usually turn them on in the daytime, even in winter-dark. There are scattered radiant heating plates on interior walls, the flat ones you can easily get through
Amazon, and I have elevated nipple-waterers and drum feeders on the floors. The flooring inside and in the outdoor runs is all construction sand. Outside the buildings we have runs made with 1/4” hardware cloth and swing out full-size doors for people entry. All of the chickens/rooster can see each other (but I only let each group put individually because of some serious “personality issues”). We did bury a large apron of tight wire completely around each coop to stop any predator digging and also put a gravel border on top of tarps around each coop to keep vegetation from growing too close to the coops themselves. Clean out long doors run along one side if I ever used bedding. There are weather-proof radios attached to each coop and there are “night-eyes” around the coops and spread randomly in immediate surrounding areas. In case you’re thinking we must be 18 and super-energetic, wrong! We are in our 60’s, I have health issues that preclude my doing the grunt work and my husband gets the joys of anything that goes wrong. I am the adoring chicken mom who reaps the love and fun factors.
When we first started out, I did lots of research on their living quarters and these are the fruits of my intellectual endeavors. Obviously, some would work for you and others might not.
While I see many people have an affinity for the pine bedding that you can continue to put new layers on, I found it very difficult to deal with as far as clean-out, we did get moisture in it from settling waste, it was not very good-smelling and it became expensive to keep refreshing. I worried a lot about disease that could start in it so it simply wasn’t viable for us. Sand is a one and done expense! I have no trouble with any moisture in it after the initial drying period when set up and it is SO simple to just pick up the daily feces with a kitty scooper, even in those floor and run dimensions. The outside run sand does occasionally get wet during storms but it dries out quickly and the birds seem to know to stay off of it until then. This decision, out of all others, has made me happiest!
The predator-proofing speaks for itself and is useful if you have those issues. I have never lost a single chicken or guinea to break-ins and only one guinea hen years ago who decided she should relocate her nest into the woods and was taken by coyotes overnight. I stay out with them when they have their daily free-range activities or stay nearby in the house to run out for pending hawk fly-overs. The guineas are wonderful at alarming for any danger so you know to run if they start squawking their predator noises. My rooster is a grand protector but doesn’t have the finely-tuned instincts to know when something is hiding nearby… he relies on the guineas as his early warning system-haha. I know this approach isn’t feasible if you aren’t home all the time so I keep them secured whenever we are away. I have learned that weasels and other similarly flexible and small predators can squeeze through the tiniest spaces, hence why we were so careful to seal everything. The grated and screened vents let in plenty of air but are not conducive to attack, particularly with the fan going.
There are always the varied opinions regarding providing heat in the winter and people swear by their methods one way or the other. I agree that chickens do well even in very cold temperatures: however, our wind factor can drop the temps so low due to wind-chill, and with their insulating feathers being blown around, I’m not comfortable at natural. In addition, their feet can get frostbite if they aren’t sitting on them most of the time. The rooster and hen combs can also frostbite and a small area of my roosters comb did just that the first year; hence all the heating plates. First, your water must, must, must stay heated to prevent freezing and deceased birds, we use a plate designed for that and it stays in the water dispenser all winter. The wall heating plates are simply radiant heat that never get hot enough to burn anybody, certainly not enough to set fires. I staggered them at multiple levels so there would always be areas with no heat and others they could crowd around. Foam insulating, even the very thin sheets, does help to cut the cold of the metal roofs; since guineas like to roost up high, it’s a little extra protection for these birds native to Africa. The coops never get warm, warm but it provides a little protection frthe very cold temps.
As far as eggs, my gals must be hyper-achievers. While their egg production, in all of their breeds, kicks into high gear for the warm months, as in daily, they never stop laying completely in the winter, no matter how cold and dark. They don’t get any additional light and some research has shown it is far healthier for the layers to have the down-time during the winter months. For commercial purposes this isn’t apparently feasible, but for “pets”, I’m shooting for the most natural and healthy ways to do things. I think your fairy lights are a brilliant idea if you are only putting them on a few hours in the daytime and fighting the dark and gloomy weather you sometimes get. It would probably make that beautiful coop even more so!
I did kind the walls with empty feed bags when we first started out; this led me to discover that some intrepid birds like to pull paper off the bags and there are the hidden thin strings that can be pulled loose. One day I found one of my girls had lassoed herself with the string and was thoroughly disgusted with the situation! I guess I thought about the potential hazard if it had tightened around her neck so they all came down (sorry Chicken Chick). I have had no problems with dirty walls and the feces are so visible on the sand that it eliminates any need for bags or boards to see their poop.
This is Glenn, lover of girls. You can see the wall and the pull-down slot that runs the length of the building. As you see, we had just started lining with feed bags but discarded them later.
This string has been fascinating and lengthy so I’m sure I’ve lost track of any other subjects. As I said, reading everyone’s thoughts is always a good idea as we are all trying to get to the same place- healthier companions! Best of luck and I remain jealous of your beautiful paint job!

Just for fun, this is Bonnie when she laid her first egg- she decided to climb into the bag of pine shavings and set her nest there. They aren’t the smartest when they first start laying but I thought this was a clever idea!
Outer door and ramp for run. You might notice we had the door insulated on the back to form a very tight seal when closed.
Interior before completion-
Gary and Georgia- you can see the best texture of sand I’ve found.
Windows in smallest coop, nesting boxes being constructed.
can’t seem to find my exterior building shots but you get the idea.
This string has been fascinating and lengthy so I’m sure I’ve lost track of any other subjects. As I said, reading everyone’s thoughts is always a good idea as we are all trying to get to the same place- healthier companions! Best of luck and I remain jealous of your beautiful paint job!