Shadrach's Ex Battery and Rescued chickens thread.

Skeksis photobomb
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I read up your article when looking a bit on hoop coops. It's clear and to the point.
Our plastic greenhouse makes so much noise when we have heavy wind that I can't really imagine chickens feeling safe though. I'm not sure it's a suitable type of structure in very windy regions ?
I have a forest preserve probably 1000ft to the west so the strongest winds are blocked.
I fasten the west side of the tarp with washer and screws. The east side is 6 inches short and I use ball bungee to hold it tight. So far no problems with the tarp. The north side has 6mil plastic stapled on. I have had a strong south wind blow that out.

North side in winter with half CX cockerel

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You may have already considered this, but plenty of other people make a square or rectangular wood frame for the door, and use wire mesh to cover the rest of the end.

Tarp is one option for weatherproofing, but it needs to be fastened down tightly so it cannot flap and shred itself, and replaced regularly. In my area, cheap tarp will last all winter, more expensive tarp will last at least two full years. The times I've used it, my structure was heavy enough or anchored well enough that it didn't blow away, but I can't predict what would happen in your conditions.

A few articles with photos:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/the-hoop-coop.65569/
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/aarts-hoop-coop-chicken-tractor.72211/
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/mos-cattle-panel-hoop-coops.73385/
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/cattle-panel-hoop-coop.74636/
(I just looked at the photo at the top of each article, rather than reading all the details for how they constructed it-- the construction looks fairly obvious to me, and I doubt you would be exactly following anyone's directions.)
@Molpet 's looks a solid construction. I'm likely to go for something like this.
I'll be laying the skirt on the ground and fixing the outside edge with nail boards to discourage digging and make moving it all easier later on.
It still amounts to quite a bit of money. I thought this coop and run chicken keeping was a cheap hobby.:hmm
 
What on earth gave you that idea? You know it is big business. There is never big business where things are cheap!
If it was big business I could understand but backyard chicken keeping is a very very small business. If I stood in Bristol city center and asked people if they kept chickens I doubt I would get one in ten thousand answer yes.
 

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