Hello! Our peafowl pens are almost done. Here are some pics.
We are using an RV carport for the inside enclosure. Each pen is about 10' x 10'. We used some heavy duty hardware cloth to divide the 2 pens. We also used the cloth for the window in the door and the window at the top of the enclosure under the peak. The roosts inside are 2" x 6" boards at 6' high.
Outside the run is 10' x 45' for each enclosure. It is made with 3' x 9' steel panels that are buried 6" around the entire perimeter. Those panels are secured to 4" x 4" pressure treated posts that are cemented into the ground 2' so that they are rock solid. The posts are spaced every 9'. Above the metal is the same hardware cloth we used inside.
The roof is made from some greenhouse hoops secured to the wood 4" x 4" posts. The netting will be over the top of those hoops and will come down the sides to the top of the hardware cloth.
To divide the outside into 2 runs we are using more hardware cloth which will be sandwiched between 2 - 2" x 4" pressure treated boards that will be cemented into the ground same as the 4" x 4" posts around the perimeter.
There are trees around the pens so they will have dappled shade as well as sun through the day. There is also one tree inside the run that we will cut the netting to go around it. I plan on adding a few perches at different heights.
I am using auto waters for them. We don't have very cold weather in the winter so we haven't had too many problems with them freezing. I use the same auto water for my chickens. Can't use them for the ducks because they turn them into a muddy mess and create a mud hole under them!
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For their feeders I'm not completely sure what to use. I have an idea I saw and I hope it will work well for them. Let me know what you guys think about it please. If it's not a good idea please give me some better recommendations!
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I got the hardware cloth via auction for $25! It was about 150' long 4' high and so heavy I couldn't lift it myself. That was a great score. It has no tags on it so I can't figure out where to find more of it unfortunately.
The metal panels I got from a person who builds those steel buildings. These were all their odds and ends left over from different jobs. I got them for about $1 a foot.
The 2" x 6" boards used to frame the inside enclosure were left over from someone's greenhouse that they dismantled. Those were free.
The paint was from the Habitat for Humanity Restore and it was $20/gallon. It is eco-friendly and has little or no VOC's so no worries about the fumes. I did let it off gas anyways though just for an additional precaution. The inside was not painted to prevent the peas from eating any paint.
I added some little solar lights from Harbor Freight that work off a switch as opposed to coming on at night so that there would be extra light inside during the daytime so I can clean it out and so they can see too but not at night when they will be sleeping.
For the flooring inside I put about 3 inches of clean construction sand, which is not a fine sand like what is used for kids sandboxes, to make it easy to rake out the poo and to help it stay cooler in the summer time.
With all the free and cheap materials I will be at about $2,500 at the end of this project. If I could have done this myself I would have been at about 1/3 of that price. If things look a little off kilter it's because the building wasn't completely level so my handyman made everything attached to the carport level to the building as opposed to level with the ground if that makes any sense
It should be completely finished by the end of the month and I can hardly wait to be able to let the peas into their runs! Currently we still have lots of rain so they can't go out yet. We have been getting about 1/2" - 1" of rain a day!
Eventually I want to extend their enclosure by taking down the eucalyptus grove on the other side of the building and adding another run going to the right of the building!
Each enclosure is currently 100 square feet (10' x 10') inside and 450 square feet (10' x 45') outside for a total of 550 square feet and they will each have one cock and one hen per enclosure.
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