Who has a chair in the coop....

pdsavage

Sussex Monarch
11 Years
Mar 27, 2008
4,286
22
241
NW,Missouri
I was editing some pics for my website this moring making them smaller and such and hubby comes up behind me and says you need to clean that pen up and take the chair out of there.......
I was like what are you talking about everyone has chairs in there coop....He just laughed at me...
Its just one of those old school desk chairs i got years ago at a auction....
There was empty water/food containers in the pic,that I was gonna fill after taking pics.
 
Not exactly in the coop but right outside the door. Actually there is a chair for each one of us and an extra one for company
lau.gif
 
Well, can't you help you there, but I do have my chairs set up so as to watch all the action just outside the run . . . my youngest and I sit in the coop, though, just on the feed bin, not a chair. I think you win!
 
We have one milkcan/tractor seat chair in the run and then I have an overturned 12' aluminum boat setting outside the run for whomever wants to sit and watch chicken TV!!
 
Well lets see. Three chairs in the yard for feeding bread treats to the flock.

On metal chair in the barn for standing on and such.

Two really comfy cloth fold ups in the barn (hanging so no poop gets on them) for those cool easy evenings with the girls and boys.

We love to watch our chickies just being chickies and there are NO commercials !!
 
We put a huge picnic table right next to the run. We also built our coop/run so we can see everybody right off the deck of the house (but a good 100 ft. back). Very relaxing!
Robyn
 
Of course! I have a small folding stool that I keep on a hook when i'm not using it.(so the girls don't poop on it). When the weather is good we let the girls out to free range and we put out our lawn chairs and watch the antics.
pop.gif
 
I've got two chairs as a matter of fact, and very often (nearly daily) sit in the chair and just observe my birds for a good while.

It may seem silly to some to "sit" in your chicken coop, but its a valuable tool in defending against illness and other issues. Simply observing on a regular basis gives you a head start in keeping your flock healthy if anything were to come up.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom