Gail Damerov, the author of numberour books on caring for poultry has a chart in The Chicken Health Handbook (my copy of which has wandered to some unknown spot in my house). It differentiates based upon the size of the chicken and whether the bird is cooped full-time, in a coop with access to a run during daylight hours or is free range.
As best as I remember (can't look it up until I find the wanderer, lol), size is differentiated into small bantam, light and large. Silkies are classified as light. In an enclosed situation (coop plus run) they should have 7 sq ft per bird. For large birds the size is 10 sq ft. For small bantams it is 4 st ft.
A bird who is cooped only at night merely needs roosting space.
edited because my keyboard isn;t working corrrectly
As best as I remember (can't look it up until I find the wanderer, lol), size is differentiated into small bantam, light and large. Silkies are classified as light. In an enclosed situation (coop plus run) they should have 7 sq ft per bird. For large birds the size is 10 sq ft. For small bantams it is 4 st ft.
A bird who is cooped only at night merely needs roosting space.
edited because my keyboard isn;t working corrrectly
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