Here's the short version of my problem/question. We've got 20 chickens right now, and 10 more day-old chicks on order that are scheduled to arrive next week. That will be 30 chickens total, and the self-imposed chicken limit we've decided on as a family. My handy, handsome husband offered to make a stationary run for the chickens (accessible from the coop during the day). He kindly asked me what I would like for the run, and I gave him a couple of pictures and I said that my only requirement is that the run have 300 square feet (enough for 10 square feet for each of the 30 chickens). Long story short, the run came up 79 square feet short. Should I cancel the order of the last 10 chicks, or will the 30 chickens be able to live peacefully in the 221 square foot run? Any experience and/or advice would be greatly appreciated!
Here are the details for you engineering types.
Right now he's got poles concreted in the ground and fencing put up. He made the width of the run a little narrower than the concrete grain silo that is our coop (13'), and the length of the run ended up at 17'. That put the run at 221 square feet, 79 square feet short of the 300 needed (using the 10 square feet per bird equation). To my husband's credit, part of the miscalculation is due to part of the rounded silo that we didn't figure in, that takes up part of the run. [In other words, the fence of the length of the run is 21', but we can really only count the run length as 17', because that's how long it is from the actual silo (coop) to the end of the run at the fattest part of the silo's circle. So there may be a *few* extra square feet in there, give or take.]
Here are the details for the married folk out there.
MY situation is this. I pointed out the space problem to my husband, asking if we could widen the coop (while he is still in the first stages of construction) to provide the extra square footage we need to make it up to 300 square feet in the run, but he was pretty miffed that I asked and he clearly didn't want to change what he had already done. Do I need to cancel my order of our extra 10 chicks, or can 30 chicks live peacefully with their 221 square foot run? To clarify, we shut them in the coop at night, and they will have access to both the coop and run during the day. I won't diminish the hard work my husband has done by bringing it up to him again, but I am also trying to appease my 4 kids (who all have "special" breeds coming with the 10 chicks next week) while also considering the health and happiness of the chickens and my marriage.
Here are the details for you engineering types.
Right now he's got poles concreted in the ground and fencing put up. He made the width of the run a little narrower than the concrete grain silo that is our coop (13'), and the length of the run ended up at 17'. That put the run at 221 square feet, 79 square feet short of the 300 needed (using the 10 square feet per bird equation). To my husband's credit, part of the miscalculation is due to part of the rounded silo that we didn't figure in, that takes up part of the run. [In other words, the fence of the length of the run is 21', but we can really only count the run length as 17', because that's how long it is from the actual silo (coop) to the end of the run at the fattest part of the silo's circle. So there may be a *few* extra square feet in there, give or take.]
Here are the details for the married folk out there.
MY situation is this. I pointed out the space problem to my husband, asking if we could widen the coop (while he is still in the first stages of construction) to provide the extra square footage we need to make it up to 300 square feet in the run, but he was pretty miffed that I asked and he clearly didn't want to change what he had already done. Do I need to cancel my order of our extra 10 chicks, or can 30 chicks live peacefully with their 221 square foot run? To clarify, we shut them in the coop at night, and they will have access to both the coop and run during the day. I won't diminish the hard work my husband has done by bringing it up to him again, but I am also trying to appease my 4 kids (who all have "special" breeds coming with the 10 chicks next week) while also considering the health and happiness of the chickens and my marriage.
