NJisBearCountry
Chirping
- Aug 24, 2022
- 10
- 20
- 51
Hello fine chicken people!
I thought I did exhaustive research before renting chickens last year and then before selecting a coop this spring but it seems like my girls keep laughing at me and finding new ways to prove I only know about indoor mammal care.
We have this coop and run: https://www.chickencoopcompany.com/...p-designs/products/the-rhode-island-homestead
We're in northernmost NJ which has Pocono/Catskill-like weather in the winter. We get extra snow and cold and wind that the rest of the state doesn't get. The coop is nestled in a wooded, brushy part of our property which helps with some wind protection but not completely. My electrician is running conduit for some outlets up to the coop so I can plug in a bucket heater and a heated perch since my girls are Polish hens and not quite as cold hardy as other breeds so we've been warned to make sure they have a little bit of supplemental heat for those couple of single-digit days we get in Jan or Feb.
Our current headcount is 3 chickens but my husband is pestering me to pick up 4 more to round out the crew asap, as that's been a long-term plan and I was stalling until I rid the coop and residents of red mites (mission accomplished, finally).
Question 1: Based on my setup and geography/weather, what additional winterization would you recommend? Should I be covering the sides of the run from wind with some kind of plastic or tarp? Does this coop appear to have appropriate ventilation, assuming it isn't drafty? Should I be keeping the side windows open or is that going to be too cold and just leave the window over the door open?
Question 2: the coop listing obviously states that it's more than enough coop for 10+ chickens, yadda yadda yadda. They even show their math and it's in line with what I've seen here but I'm skeptical. There are 4 roost bars inside the coop but only one is raised above the bedding on the floor and that's what my girls sleep on. It's diagonal so it's nice and long but not 10ft long. Do chickens happily roost on bars that are basically grazing the sand? Or will that eventually stress them out? Do I need to find a way to add more roosting footage in there to have 7 happy chickens? Is there really enough room for 7 happy chickens in there with the dimensions they list?
My girls currently are confined to the coop and run but we do plan to allow them some (limited) free range access within electric poultry netting once we can trust that the newest flock members will come home at night so I'm slightly less concerned about run space.
Thank you in advance for your chicken wisdom. I call my birds dumb but they keep proving to me that I am the dumb one.
I thought I did exhaustive research before renting chickens last year and then before selecting a coop this spring but it seems like my girls keep laughing at me and finding new ways to prove I only know about indoor mammal care.
We have this coop and run: https://www.chickencoopcompany.com/...p-designs/products/the-rhode-island-homestead
We're in northernmost NJ which has Pocono/Catskill-like weather in the winter. We get extra snow and cold and wind that the rest of the state doesn't get. The coop is nestled in a wooded, brushy part of our property which helps with some wind protection but not completely. My electrician is running conduit for some outlets up to the coop so I can plug in a bucket heater and a heated perch since my girls are Polish hens and not quite as cold hardy as other breeds so we've been warned to make sure they have a little bit of supplemental heat for those couple of single-digit days we get in Jan or Feb.
Our current headcount is 3 chickens but my husband is pestering me to pick up 4 more to round out the crew asap, as that's been a long-term plan and I was stalling until I rid the coop and residents of red mites (mission accomplished, finally).
Question 1: Based on my setup and geography/weather, what additional winterization would you recommend? Should I be covering the sides of the run from wind with some kind of plastic or tarp? Does this coop appear to have appropriate ventilation, assuming it isn't drafty? Should I be keeping the side windows open or is that going to be too cold and just leave the window over the door open?
Question 2: the coop listing obviously states that it's more than enough coop for 10+ chickens, yadda yadda yadda. They even show their math and it's in line with what I've seen here but I'm skeptical. There are 4 roost bars inside the coop but only one is raised above the bedding on the floor and that's what my girls sleep on. It's diagonal so it's nice and long but not 10ft long. Do chickens happily roost on bars that are basically grazing the sand? Or will that eventually stress them out? Do I need to find a way to add more roosting footage in there to have 7 happy chickens? Is there really enough room for 7 happy chickens in there with the dimensions they list?
My girls currently are confined to the coop and run but we do plan to allow them some (limited) free range access within electric poultry netting once we can trust that the newest flock members will come home at night so I'm slightly less concerned about run space.
Thank you in advance for your chicken wisdom. I call my birds dumb but they keep proving to me that I am the dumb one.