BressMan
In the Brooder
Hi everybody, long time reader, first time poster.
I'm in the process of building my coop for a June delivery of 7 Bress chickens. (I'm choosing Bress because of the patriotic red white and blue coloring along with a good combo of egg/meat/foraging). The coop is 8x8, made out of pallet wood, so all the 2x4 studs are 5' long. It goes from 5' high in the back to 8' high in the front. Today, it has 3 sides and the roof, and it is full of firewood. I plan to have a chicken run for the initial flock introduction and special circumstances, but once they are acclimated, the chickens will have free run of the one acre property which is mostly grass, fruit and nut trees, berry bushes, and fenced off garden. The back of the property is a river that is not fenced, so I am hopeful that as long as I provide them with good water, they won't try to go swimming.
I definitely want an automatic chicken door and will certainly purchase (a battery powered) one if necessary, but I don't have power at the coop, so I'd rather have a non-power solution. I'm considering using the chickens themselves to close the door by designing the roost bar on a hinged lever that, when 4-5 chickens get on it, their weight will close the door. And when they wake up and hop off, the counterbalance will open the door.
I can think of 2 possible issues with this design. First, will the chickens all come into the coop before about 4 chickens hop up onto the roost? I could possibly design a buffer that will slow down the lowering of the door, but have yet to come up with a cheap solution for this. The second possible issue is when there is a predator outside the coop (which will be well fortified as long as the door is closed). Will the chickens get excited and get off the roost, thus causing their own demise by inadvertently opening the very door protecting them.
What is your experience in terms of amount of time after the chickens enter the coop in the evening before they hop up on the roost and how much time difference from the time half the chickens are in until all the chickens are in (by "all chickens", I mean the same number of chickens that would come in by time a timer based coop door would close....recognizing that it is possible that one or more chickens may stay outside no matter what)
What do your chickens do when they sense a predator outside a secure coop? Do they stay on the roost?
Thanks for your input.
I'm in the process of building my coop for a June delivery of 7 Bress chickens. (I'm choosing Bress because of the patriotic red white and blue coloring along with a good combo of egg/meat/foraging). The coop is 8x8, made out of pallet wood, so all the 2x4 studs are 5' long. It goes from 5' high in the back to 8' high in the front. Today, it has 3 sides and the roof, and it is full of firewood. I plan to have a chicken run for the initial flock introduction and special circumstances, but once they are acclimated, the chickens will have free run of the one acre property which is mostly grass, fruit and nut trees, berry bushes, and fenced off garden. The back of the property is a river that is not fenced, so I am hopeful that as long as I provide them with good water, they won't try to go swimming.
I definitely want an automatic chicken door and will certainly purchase (a battery powered) one if necessary, but I don't have power at the coop, so I'd rather have a non-power solution. I'm considering using the chickens themselves to close the door by designing the roost bar on a hinged lever that, when 4-5 chickens get on it, their weight will close the door. And when they wake up and hop off, the counterbalance will open the door.
I can think of 2 possible issues with this design. First, will the chickens all come into the coop before about 4 chickens hop up onto the roost? I could possibly design a buffer that will slow down the lowering of the door, but have yet to come up with a cheap solution for this. The second possible issue is when there is a predator outside the coop (which will be well fortified as long as the door is closed). Will the chickens get excited and get off the roost, thus causing their own demise by inadvertently opening the very door protecting them.
What is your experience in terms of amount of time after the chickens enter the coop in the evening before they hop up on the roost and how much time difference from the time half the chickens are in until all the chickens are in (by "all chickens", I mean the same number of chickens that would come in by time a timer based coop door would close....recognizing that it is possible that one or more chickens may stay outside no matter what)
What do your chickens do when they sense a predator outside a secure coop? Do they stay on the roost?
Thanks for your input.