Pennsylvania!! Unite!!

Good evening folks:

I can't keep up with all the conversations so:

Purdy....got most of my stuff in the ground...need more warm weather...to tell if its going to be a bust....

Fisher...more broody action....I can't control my one....I removed her eggs last night...this evening she was in a different box with her little one sitting on an egg a GLW laid....duh!

Wing...like the straw coop idea...here's my take.....shrink wrapped bales of pine shavings cost at most $9.....16 bales would be a 6'x6' square about 3-4' tall.....set the pine bales on 4 pallets and the pallets on flagstone blocks....the pine will insulate and the shrink wrap will shed off any moisture and seal air tight....could even do a formal flooring for clean up....just a thought....
 
haha! My husband would KILL me if I brought more home lol.



What if they just followed you home? Could you keep them then?


:lau: That made me LOL!
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I am thoroughly confused :/ someone was singing the egg song today in the coop. I have no idea who it was. I even double checked it and looked up what the egg song sounds like. Everyone will be 11 weeks old on Saturday (except Chip and Cookie who will be 12 weeks). Do they practice singing it before hand or should I get my butt moving and get those nest boxes built already?
 
Originally Posted by DJ Bear

Fayetteville PA is a newbie looking for the perfect coop for 7 chicks....the Bremerton Coop from Urban Chicken site has been ordered, but now delayed. Can one be made for $200-300???? Suggestions welcome. We have been all over the map checking here and most everywhere else with pics and posts. Some say 4x4 with a yard, while others say minimum 6x8.
Very confused, but anxious!?
Thanks
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Inside the large size fowl should have 4 sq. ft each. So you need a 28 sq. ft. coop. 5x6 or 4x8.
If you went down to 3.5 sq. ft. each, it's not ideal, but doable, that would be ok for 4x6 coop.
Hang the nest boxes off the side of the coop so they don't take up your floor space.
If you have bantams, 1/2 all the measurements.
When I built my coops/poultry yard, nothing went in the ground so a "temporary structure" and no permits needed. Everything sets on the grounds. The roofed poultry yard is 5x6'H chicken wire covered panels which screw together from both sides with 3 inch coated decking screws. When you make your door in one f the panels, make sure it is wide enough for wheelbarrow.
A 2' high 3-sided base made of 2x4's was used to raise the coop off the ground. We ran chicken wire around the base and covered that with that translucent vinyl carpet runner they sell at Lowe's. Makes a great outside foul weather run in and scratching/dusting shed. Built a door into one end of the coop base to access for cleaning. If you put a peaked roof on your coop, you need a cupola or ridge vent. If you use a one angle roof, then vents/windows on the upper 1/2 of the highest wall will do.
best,
Karen
 

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