Our new hot weather coop

Paul_A

In the Brooder
8 Years
Jan 4, 2012
9
1
11
Palm Harbor, Florida
Backyard hens became legal in Pinellas County Florida December 2011 so after a bunch of research we took the plunge and acquired 4 chicks the first week of 2012. Here are the lil cuties, two Rhode Island Reds and two Barred Plymouth Rocks.





By March I was ready to start the coop construction as the girls were quickly outgrowing their temporary living room dog kennel residence.

Here they are enjoying a bit of the outdoors.




Although hurricanes are rare on west coast of Florida I still wanted to be prepared. Knowing that designing and building a coop that may have to withstand 70 mph winds or more would be expensive and difficult if not impossible I went a different route and constructed this coop so that it could be easily disassembled and moved in pieces into the garage.

Also with the warm weather we love here I wanted the girls to have plenty of circulation as well as protection from our frequent summer showers. The coop is sited alongside our house which will give them protection from strong winds coming in off the gulf and with the side wall facing north they should be warm enough in the winter.

First we built and painted 4 stud walls, here they are in the garage after having been painted.




And here we have the stud walls attached to four 4"x4"x8' fence posts which were sunk into the ground to the appropriate depth. The stud walls are resting on landscape timbers cut to fit. The footprint of the coop/run is 6'x9' which accomodates the width of the hardware cloth.







Couple of detail shots of the 1/2" welded wire attachment method. Staples followed by 1"x2" trim strips screwed on to secure and hide staples.








And here is the completed coop/run. The girls love their new home!

This is the front of the coop including nesting box and one of three nipple waterers.

I also covered the wire with screen as the mosquitos are extremely heavy this year.

Additionally I insulated the underside of the roof with 3/4" foam insulation board which had the added benefit of covering the
gaps created by the metal roofing.




Another angle. You can see the roof insulation in this shot as well as the people door and sliding hen door with fold down mosquito screen which in this pic is being held up by magnets.




Side and back including bucket and pvc water system.




Interior shot including their roost, entrance to nesting box and their ramp.




Homemade feeder which along with the water system creates low maintenance chicken care.
Other than raking up the copious amounts of chicken doo once a day. My compost heap is loving them...



And the payoff for all the hard work and planning.

Happy hens!




And a gift to us. Our first two egg day along with a golf ball and marble egg to trick them.
First egg came about a week ago and they have given us ten so far.




Everything was assembled using deck screws so if need be I could pull off the roof panels, disassemble the water system and move each wall into our garage out of harms way in a couple of hours.

Total cost came in at about 650, and a whole lot of time but the end result is well worth it.
 
Very nice! Thanks for showing all of the detail. You did a great job and it's very attractive.
 
Nice coop. Thanks for posting the photos. I tried explaining this method of construction to DH and he stared at me blankly. Now I can show him the pretty pictures! lol

Actually, once we figure out where the coop will live permanently I will construct the run myself. DH will help hold the walls up and do other "he-man" tasks.

Looks like you have room for more than 4 hens. Hasn't chicken math struck yet?
 
Thank you all!

Yes we would like to have six or eight but the local ordinance only allows four hens.

Although if we ever escape suburbia there will be a whole lot more.
 
Nice job. You did your homework. I bet the wind would blow right thru it depending on the direction. I would probably take the girls into the garage and take my chances on the coop and run. But you know hurricanes much better than me.
 
Looks great! So pretty! Well constructed!
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I also really like that blue/green color you choose.
 
This is very similar to my current plan. Good idea about the removable panels. Why the insulation under the roof? Does it keep the heat away from the coop?

We don't have a garage so I'm not sure what we'll do during a hurricane. We have wind and flood to deal with.
 

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