I'd love to have chicken again but wide is dumb
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I'd love to have chicken again but wide is dumb
Can we move this thread to the DIY section and put the phrase "Backyard Chickens" in the title so it can be searched please?
To be fair, I haven't really concentrated on an egg laying, more just getting it a house out of my garage. It's basically just been in a barren cage for days now. Since I'm not going to run lights outside, it probably won't lay eggs for a while anyway.
Got it set out in the garden. It has doors on it, but they are terrible and need to be re-done. I suppose a big thing to take from this thread is to actually plan things out and do them well; that really goes for everything in life though. Since we just found this chicken in the street, and I'm on an extremely low spending binge, I just had to throw everything together with junk that was already taking up space at my place. So the trophy wife wants the chickens in a run so they aren't crapping all over the place. We agreed to do a run, but I can wait till spring to build it. With that said, I realized my raised bed gardens that I also am nearly finished building would work perfectly for something like this. Also, with the raised beds, I don't have to worry about burying chicken cloth and the fence serves as one side already. I think some pvc pipe bent into a hoop (from 4x4 corner posts to fence) will make for a fast and easy run.
http://reclaimgrowsustain.com/sites/...ken-coopgarden
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/QX...=w1698-h955-no
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/FE...=w1698-h955-no
If you're on a budget, check craigslist for scrap wood and other materials. I was fortunate enough that there was enough scrap left over from decades of my family's home improvement projects to throw a coop together for cheap. Doesn't have to be pretty, just has to keep the elements off of them!
Also I highly recommend the books 'Raising Chickens for Dummies,' 'Chicken Coops for Dummies' and 'Chicken Health for Dummies.' They all break it down pretty well and are a great resource for someone starting out.
The only other item I'd add is that if your coop will be on ground level, to dig a trench and bury chicken wire to keep raccoons from digging in under. But it looks like yours is raised, so you won't have that problem.
Thanks for all the tips so far evereyone. I have an attic full of used wood from years of the previous owner's projects that I used. The dog house was free. I got to thinking and if I had to do this again for very few chickens, I'd just run to Habitat or that place at I-70 and Colorado and pick up a cheap sink base or bathroom vanity. Board up the back, place a board over the top with hinges, and you're pretty much done since it already comes with cupboard doors and possibly even a shelf. Attach a small run off the back and you've got yourself a perfect coop and run for an urban set-up if you have a tiny yard like mine.
For those of you with experience, I've been reading about introducing new chickens to a flock, and it seems like you're supposed to keep them separated for up to a month. Since I only have one chick, but want to add two-three more, I feel like I'm basically adding my one chicken to a pre-existing flock, which is supposed to be a no-no. Could I get pullets from different coops so there isn't an already established pecking order and just put them together at night? What do you recommend?