puddleglumWI
Songster
Hello all,
I have been back on the family farm for about 9 months, and am once again thinking about getting chickens. There is an old dairy barn here, that hasn't been used in decades, but water and electricity still run to it. I am tempted to build a nice big run outside onto a corner of the barn, and repurpose enough square footage inside to act as a spacious coop.
There are lots of openings here and there in the barn that I would need to close up, but I am quite sure I can make it so racoons possums and cats can't get in. I can't keep weasels and rats from getting in though, so I would be looking at building some walls inside and hardware cloth all around to make sure the chickens are safe. A coop inside the barn.
I would be out of the wind while feeding, watering, collecting eggs, etc. and wouldn't be carrying buckets of water since there is a water spigot in the barn. I also could have fantastic ventilation of the coop with huge tracts of ventilation, as the barn itself is a wind barrier. It also is big enough and has a little draftiness so that humidity shouldn't be a problem.
Anyone using part of a barn or other big building as a coop?
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
-pg
I have been back on the family farm for about 9 months, and am once again thinking about getting chickens. There is an old dairy barn here, that hasn't been used in decades, but water and electricity still run to it. I am tempted to build a nice big run outside onto a corner of the barn, and repurpose enough square footage inside to act as a spacious coop.
There are lots of openings here and there in the barn that I would need to close up, but I am quite sure I can make it so racoons possums and cats can't get in. I can't keep weasels and rats from getting in though, so I would be looking at building some walls inside and hardware cloth all around to make sure the chickens are safe. A coop inside the barn.
I would be out of the wind while feeding, watering, collecting eggs, etc. and wouldn't be carrying buckets of water since there is a water spigot in the barn. I also could have fantastic ventilation of the coop with huge tracts of ventilation, as the barn itself is a wind barrier. It also is big enough and has a little draftiness so that humidity shouldn't be a problem.
Anyone using part of a barn or other big building as a coop?
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
-pg