Roost height in coop

73luke

In the Brooder
6 Years
Mar 26, 2013
13
2
26


Hi guys,

Ive just converted an old bicycle shed which measures 7 feet x 3.5 feet into a coop for 4 chickens and I have put a roost made from an old tree branch at around 10 inches high. I would like to give them a higher roost but im worried that given its only 3.5 feet wide will they have enough room to flap their wings to get up and down from a roost say 3 or 4 feet high, they do use the current one but I have seen some really high ones on here.

Any advice is most welcome!
 
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I converted part of the under part of my deck into a coop.
I have perches that are about 4.5 feet off the ground.
Most of my birds (they are about 2 months old) can get up there.
For the smaller ones, i stacked 2 milk crates to give them a boost.
If you add another perch, dont do it over the lower one or the birds on top will poop on the birds below.
 
Hi there, I was thinking of just moving the existing one higher.
 
From your picture, I would remodel. Chickens like to roost as high as possible (trees, if they could!);

I would place the roost BOARD, not a pole- chickens do not have feet like songbirds, that have toes to wrap around. 3 inch board gives them stability and in winter, body covers the feet to keep them warm. Across the narrow end, and 10-`12 inches from the end wall, at least--further, if their tails touch the wall. Place a shelf below the roost , about 6 inches below. It will catch all the night poop and keep the floor cleaner=and is easy to scrape clean every month and avoid bad smell. You need another roost board maybe just 2 inches wide, in front and below the roost shelf and roost, to fly up to (they LIKE to fly and just not too high for the first flight up; to roost. High enough that you can service the birds on the floor without banging your head=. You will have room for your feeder and water at the other end of the coop--up on blocks of some kind, so they will not scratch bedding into them. And best to have some kind of raised "box" for the waterer, so the floor will NEVER be wet around the waterer. For 4 hens, it can be a very nice set up. Oh, nest box (1 is enough) could be on another shelf just below the roost shelf (with the 2" board in front to land on to enter the nest box, as well as the flyup to the night roost==all the built ins on one end. plenty of room to move around the rest--easy for both you and the hens. Good luck .
 
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Hi - just my two cents. If you're going to move the bar higher then I would put a thicker bedding down to give them a softer landing. It was hard to tell from the pic, but it looks like sand? I have orpingtons, which are a heavy breed, and I've only got the perch 2 ft. off the ground. I'm also in the process of installing a ladder as well (which they will most likely ignore, lol!). They WANT it to be higher, but I don't want bumblefoot or leg/feet problems from them doing belly flops off the high board.
 

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