jingles
In the Brooder
- Jul 31, 2015
- 34
- 0
- 32
Hi all,
I have only been keeping chickens for about 4 months, and it has been a steep learning curve, but hopefully with the help of You guys at BYC I think I am getting there. I currently have 3 8ish month old girls (2 x Sussex & an Australorp) in a penthouse bought coop
http://www.backyardchickencoops.com...chickencoops.com.au/chook-pens/the-penthouse/
They have a large area fenced off with an electric mesh to wander during the day, so only use the coop to sleep & lay eggs.
The problem is that I want to get 4 more heavy breed birds from the same breeder I got these girls from. This gives me 2 problems -
a) should I still quarantine the birds even though they are from the same source just in case something has happened in the last few months to his flock.
b) will 7 heavy breeds birds fit in the coop to sleep when they are fully grown (I will probably only be able to get 4 month old birds so won't be an issue to start with).
If I quarantine I need another coop. I have 2 kids under 3 so there is no way I can construct anything which means I'd need to buy another coop. I don't really like wood, as I think the maintenance is going to be pretty hard, and this coop design is pretty tough to keep clean! So that leads me to the idea of a plastic one - the only one here in oz is the super expensive Eglu cube. It looks easy to clean, but again might be too small for my whole flock when fully grown. This would mean I would have to keep two coops on the go with a shared free range area, and let the chickens choose which one to roost in at night.
Any thoughts or suggestions on
1. current coop suitability for 7 heavy chickens
2. To quarantine even if from same breeder relatively recently
3. what coop to quarantine in if I do.
4. If I can keep 2 coops on the go afterwards or combine to one coop (if it is big enough).
If I had any free time I would love to build my own coop, but there is no way that is going to happen! I need easy clean an as little maintenance as possible. I don't mind spending a lot of cash for a coop if it saves precious hours in maintenance time (painting, cleaning etc), and reduces my girls issues with mites etc.
Thanks heaps in advance,
Julia
I have only been keeping chickens for about 4 months, and it has been a steep learning curve, but hopefully with the help of You guys at BYC I think I am getting there. I currently have 3 8ish month old girls (2 x Sussex & an Australorp) in a penthouse bought coop
http://www.backyardchickencoops.com...chickencoops.com.au/chook-pens/the-penthouse/
They have a large area fenced off with an electric mesh to wander during the day, so only use the coop to sleep & lay eggs.
The problem is that I want to get 4 more heavy breed birds from the same breeder I got these girls from. This gives me 2 problems -
a) should I still quarantine the birds even though they are from the same source just in case something has happened in the last few months to his flock.
b) will 7 heavy breeds birds fit in the coop to sleep when they are fully grown (I will probably only be able to get 4 month old birds so won't be an issue to start with).
If I quarantine I need another coop. I have 2 kids under 3 so there is no way I can construct anything which means I'd need to buy another coop. I don't really like wood, as I think the maintenance is going to be pretty hard, and this coop design is pretty tough to keep clean! So that leads me to the idea of a plastic one - the only one here in oz is the super expensive Eglu cube. It looks easy to clean, but again might be too small for my whole flock when fully grown. This would mean I would have to keep two coops on the go with a shared free range area, and let the chickens choose which one to roost in at night.
Any thoughts or suggestions on
1. current coop suitability for 7 heavy chickens
2. To quarantine even if from same breeder relatively recently
3. what coop to quarantine in if I do.
4. If I can keep 2 coops on the go afterwards or combine to one coop (if it is big enough).
If I had any free time I would love to build my own coop, but there is no way that is going to happen! I need easy clean an as little maintenance as possible. I don't mind spending a lot of cash for a coop if it saves precious hours in maintenance time (painting, cleaning etc), and reduces my girls issues with mites etc.
Thanks heaps in advance,
Julia