As I look at the 4x8 structure that I'm about to convert to an outdoor brooder and thinking of how uncomfortable it will be to hunch down in there (it's between 4 1/2 and 5 feet tall), I remember the backbreaking agony of the half-height run that was originally attached to my Little Monitor Coop.
We made it easy to detach, thinking that we would be able to pull it away to clean out.
NOPE. Not even considering the annoyance of moving the blocks, once the run litter started to build up it would have taken a team of strong men with prybars to get it loose and move it -- which is what happened when we needed to take it off to move the coop to the new property.
Cleaning in there was awful! I had to shovel and fork bedding while bent almost double. Backache doesn't being to describe it. Additionally, not having room to really turn around and pitch the used litter out the door but, instead, having to move it in stages, meant that cleaning took longer than it needed to.
I wish I had known that the cost of the extra lumber and hardware cloth for a full-height, walk-in run would have been paid for in ibuprofen and time saved.
I wish I had known to really THINK about how I would clean under less than ideal conditions -- walked through it step-by-step looking for problems in the design.
What do you wish you'd have known before you bought or built your first coop?
We made it easy to detach, thinking that we would be able to pull it away to clean out.

NOPE. Not even considering the annoyance of moving the blocks, once the run litter started to build up it would have taken a team of strong men with prybars to get it loose and move it -- which is what happened when we needed to take it off to move the coop to the new property.
Cleaning in there was awful! I had to shovel and fork bedding while bent almost double. Backache doesn't being to describe it. Additionally, not having room to really turn around and pitch the used litter out the door but, instead, having to move it in stages, meant that cleaning took longer than it needed to.
I wish I had known that the cost of the extra lumber and hardware cloth for a full-height, walk-in run would have been paid for in ibuprofen and time saved.
I wish I had known to really THINK about how I would clean under less than ideal conditions -- walked through it step-by-step looking for problems in the design.
What do you wish you'd have known before you bought or built your first coop?