Chicken Coop Features NOT To Forget (8 Things To Consider)

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 81

  • @ThesmartestTem
    @ThesmartestTem Год назад +68

    Use linoleum to protect your floor. Especially if doing deep litter or keeping water in your coop. We have a sheet of scrap linoleum covering the whole bottom and about 4 inches up all sides to create a sort of tub to hold the shavings. It will help keep the floor of your coop from rotting out.

    • @katrina7238
      @katrina7238 Год назад +3

      That's such a good idea and I'm curious to ask how it has worked for you! The interwebs told me the floor could rot by trapping moisture underneath the linoleum, but it does seem like it would be so much easier to scrape deep litter / poop off of linoleum! Has the plywood /OSB under your linoleum stayed dry for you? Thank you!

    • @MosaicHomestead
      @MosaicHomestead 10 месяцев назад +2

      If you're in a humid environment, eventually any floor that is made out of wood, protected or not, is going to rot, the good news is you will get about 3 to 4 years before thinking of changing it. My elevated coop, that I can stand up in 😂has a steel reinforced concrete floor tilled in porcelain tile that looks like old barn wood that is 100% water proof and poop 💩 proof, My chicken bunker once finished will be the ultimate chicken coop lol.

    • @nogames8982
      @nogames8982 10 месяцев назад +1

      The automatic chicken door is so wonderful.

    • @peterlee2780
      @peterlee2780 4 месяца назад +1

      No. Paint and floor sealer.

    • @nobody8328
      @nobody8328 3 месяца назад

      ​@peterlee2780 Serious question- What are the advantages of floor sealer over the free linoleum that I'm thinking of using?

  • @Caveman_Mid_MO
    @Caveman_Mid_MO Год назад +8

    You are such a breath of fresh air. Wonderful personality!

  • @matthewtaylor2185
    @matthewtaylor2185 Год назад +10

    Make that floor and big door opening a little higher than your wheelbarrow. Make it so you can get your wheelbarrow back UNDER the ledge. Then you can just drag the litter out.

  • @markchidester6239
    @markchidester6239 Год назад +7

    Excellent video!
    Roost. About six months ago I put up a 2x6 with an 18" sheet of plywood attached to the bottom to collect poop.
    I scrape it off every two or three days.
    Coop stays much much cleaner and use far less bedding.
    Aerial protection
    I have no idea what the poultry stuff costs, but deer fence is likely about the same. Menards has it priced at $50 for a 7x100 foot section.

  • @anirthesengalparrot
    @anirthesengalparrot 8 месяцев назад +7

    Auto doors and rolling egges things honestly take the fun out from having chikens sometimes even the water dishes i mean going evry morning to feed and water them also put them back in the coop just what makes having chikens special so please people consider having chikens the traditional way❤

    • @737smartin
      @737smartin 4 месяца назад

      To each his own, I suppose.

  • @JumaWoge-ds7oy
    @JumaWoge-ds7oy 7 дней назад

    As am building chicken coop right now...I thank u for beautiful Information...thank u bless

  • @larrycollins7106
    @larrycollins7106 Год назад +5

    If you use an elevated coop, make sure it is high enough to get under. If your chickens start laying under the coop, you need to be able to access them. It’s amazing how small of a space they can fit into.

  • @darlenedavis8690
    @darlenedavis8690 Год назад +16

    The first coop I had was a "walk-in". It was an old tack room that we converted. It had its pros and cons. The 2 main reasons that I now have an elevated one with a big door is 1) walking on the chicken poop and then potentially tracking it back to other places. I did have a pair of coop shoes (shoes I only wore in the coop) so maybe I was just paranoid. 2) I injured my back years ago and bending to shovel or rake the litter out caused my back to "go out" several times. In my new coop, the doors open at waist level so no bending is involved. I just use a rake to pull the litter out when we change it twice a year. I 200% agree with #3. Can't stress ventilation enough. Just make sure that you don't have drafts blowing RIGHT on your chicks. Our first nesting boxes were old Tidy Cat litter buckets. Just cut off half the lid and voila - worked perfectly.

    • @HDGamingPlus
      @HDGamingPlus Год назад

      Did you buy your coop from somewhere or build it from plans? I'm looking for this exact type of coop to save my back!

    • @davinasquirrel7672
      @davinasquirrel7672 4 месяца назад

      @@HDGamingPlus if you look at Oak Abode's home page, they have a video on making that raised white coop that may help.

  • @joeolejar
    @joeolejar Год назад +2

    I enjoyed your comment about a walk in coop. Our flock of 21 chickens is in what was built as a horse stall. Has good protection from the elements and has great ventilation.

  • @lindyconner7998
    @lindyconner7998 Год назад +1

    Great coop instructions. We bought the instructions off Etsy and tweaked a few things for our space and added some of our own ideas, but it was very helpful not to have to do it all from scratch. We probably used 90% of it. Added a roof that opens for easier cleaning, changed the placement of the doors for our space. Really great coop and instructions!

  • @elainepeers9406
    @elainepeers9406 7 месяцев назад +3

    I have both traditional nest boxes with sawdust from our mill (not fine saw dust) and roll away nest boxes. The disadvantage to the roll away boxes is that in very cold weather the eggs in the roll away boxes will freeze faster than the eggs in the nest boxes with bedding and hens laying repeatedly in them. So if you can't get out frequently to collect the eggs in very cold weather you will have more frozen eggs.

  • @frankieboy2417
    @frankieboy2417 Год назад +6

    I enjoy your podcasts, my first consideration was making sure I went almost double on area size requirements. Finally done after today with coop and run. If I can find an email of yours where I can send pics or a video when I'm done painting. 51 years I waited to get chickens and at 7 weeks old they're already spoiled rotten.

  • @lenorawisdom6544
    @lenorawisdom6544 2 месяца назад

    We use covered cat litter boxes for nesting boxes. They work great.

  • @iwantosavemoney
    @iwantosavemoney Год назад +1

    That waterer in a cubby hole is just genius we like the little giant auto waterers.

  • @Molls784
    @Molls784 8 месяцев назад

    My family and I are starting our chicken journey and your videos and channel have been so helpful. Thank you!

  • @JoyfullyOrangeDeborah
    @JoyfullyOrangeDeborah Год назад +4

    I love watching your videos! You give such straight forward information and try to your best to address as many issues as possible. Thank you! We don't have chickens (yet) as I need to find out if & how many we are allowed. One nbr a few houses up had some a few years back but her coop has been empty since then. We have a 12' 45-60° incline along our small back yard. Would chickens be ok with an access to a run that was alongside & under the coop on the incline?
    Many Blessings from Deborah in West Virginia!

  • @andrewkraus8802
    @andrewkraus8802 Год назад

    We LOVE our OverEZ Large size coop. VERY pricey but the install and quality was very good and allowed us to get our chickens even faster with the time saved from having to build from scratch

  • @nogames8982
    @nogames8982 10 месяцев назад

    I purposely placed my chicken coop where it would be out of the wind in the winter and out of direct sunlight in the summer. It has made a huge difference in caring for my chickens. It was -7 here last week with a -20 windchill. This summer will have a few weeks of over 100°. but the placement of my coop helps with the most severe weather.

  • @tinakathleen8571
    @tinakathleen8571 Год назад

    Collevting fresh eggs everyday is the best bonus of keeping chickens. I call our youngest the chicken farmer so his more invested in daily chicken care.

  • @chasmarischen4459
    @chasmarischen4459 2 месяца назад

    Good video. Straight to the point.

  • @hirofortis
    @hirofortis Год назад +2

    My understanding is 1 nest box per 3 chickens. That has worked well for me. But I only have 8 hens. Thank you for the info. I had built my coop off of one of your raised designs and thankfully I met all the check boxes. :)

    • @davinasquirrel7672
      @davinasquirrel7672 4 месяца назад

      Generally about right. One time, when I only had three hens, I did have all three want to nest at the same time. The nesting box was just big enough for two, and luckily there was a little entrance area just in front for the third. Only happened the once.

  • @dirt4fun
    @dirt4fun Год назад +2

    I have one of the Hen Gear boxes. It is well built, well designed, and looks good. I also have an elevated nest box that's built into the coop. But my girls prefer to just make a nest in the corner of the coop, and lay their eggs there. Ugh... Since they're happy and the eggs are clean. go for it girls.

    • @ThesmartestTem
      @ThesmartestTem Год назад

      That's what mine did. 😂 They rejected their nesting boxes and use the corners of the coop. I only have a small backyard flock so it's not a big deal.

  • @chihuahuamartin24
    @chihuahuamartin24 Год назад

    We’re new at having chickens… we have 6 hens and 3 boxes and last week had been the first week that all 6 have layed one egg each a day. I’ve gone out to 2 broken eggs , not sure what happened but I cleaned the mess up promptly so as not to encourage that behavior. This morning I opened the nest box lid and had 2 hens in one box, don’t know what was going on there..no egg fatalities today… I had to go out 4 times because they don’t all lay at once… I wasn’t sure if they should all have their own box. Thanks for all the videos and information! 😊

  • @chromasux2
    @chromasux2 Год назад +1

    We've built two coops so far, both elevated, but we still covered most of the runs, so they don't have to stay under the coop in hot sun or heavy rain, as we get both often here in Tennessee. Only real issue was I didn't check every dimension of the plans we used for the first one which led to quite a bit of modifying to work and on one wall throwing out the dimensions and doing the best we could. Second coop I pretty much just modified from a set of plans to meet our needs for new silkies and it came out much better and secure. Door is too small for me to get through but the kids can get up in there with them when they want. The only thing I'm not sure about is if I put too much ventilation in that one for winters, which can get below freezing at times. Our main flock suffered a few frostbit combs when it got down in single digits out of nowhere before we wrapped the coop up in a tarp but were good after that. Thanks for the info!

    • @farfalla959
      @farfalla959 Год назад

      Did you have ventilation along the top on all 4 sides?🤔 I’m planning my coop and have that in my plans. Hmmm🤔

  • @williamphillips1922
    @williamphillips1922 Год назад

    I have chickens that are about to start laying so they will be getting layer feed. I also have sum 5 week old chicks ive been introducing into the new flock and will be in the coop permanently next week. So how do I keep the lil chicks outt the layer feed and vice versa. Also luv the videos been a fan for a while you have helped me out alot from getting ready to get my chicks to there coop to being big girls so thanks for all the help

  • @jocelyndasilva3065
    @jocelyndasilva3065 2 месяца назад

    Hi, I just watched your walk in shed chicken coop. Which one do you have now? Wondering if you recommend the elevated or walk in coup since you’ve had a few coops now.

  • @davinasquirrel7672
    @davinasquirrel7672 4 месяца назад

    One thing forgotten in on-ground coop/run protection, digging predator protection. My two main predators (Australia) are eagles and foxes. So I had to have a solid wire mesh roof over the run as well, because foxes will hunt during the day during winter, and they can climb (up and over the sides). The run also has shade cloth over it for the summer, important in the heat.
    My chickens seem to prefer the flat timber roosts. Structural (not 'treated') pine, about 3" (75mm) wide and it already had rounded edges.

  • @MosaicHomestead
    @MosaicHomestead 10 месяцев назад +1

    You mentioned a couple of things I haven't had luck with, I bought a chicken guard extreme with the self locking door, the door is horrible, I get door errors all the time, I eventually had to disconnect the door, Chicken guard changed their design because reputable businesses like Carolina coops stopped selling these expensive garbage doors. Another crappie chicken item that doesn't work well is those plastic self filling cup feeders, I also don't like the plastic peck feeders because that's not how chickens drink water in the wild, just imagine yourself smashing your teeth against a metal object to drink water lol. I researched a full year before building my coop, it has a ton of features that work great, the 2 biggest failures have been the chicken guard door and the plastic cup feeders, I have switched to stainless steel commercial animal waterers, I've tweak them to make them even better.

  • @markgriggs3636
    @markgriggs3636 Год назад +1

    Automatic chicken door. Have you had any trouble with the door not opening in very cold temperatures? Ours stopped working when the temperature hit -20

  • @StephenBiggers
    @StephenBiggers 2 месяца назад

    I noticed your water in the run. How do you keep that water from developing algae? I have that exact waterer and I'm constantly trying to scrub it out. Even happens in shadier areas. Any tips are appreciated. Thanks

  • @sumatai1
    @sumatai1 5 месяцев назад

    Brilliant!! Thank you for sharing

  • @vincenthunt9991
    @vincenthunt9991 6 месяцев назад

    hi, i cant see the plans anywhere!
    great build!

  • @user-xi4ec3mm9w
    @user-xi4ec3mm9w 6 месяцев назад

    This video was really helpful, thanks.

  • @farfalla959
    @farfalla959 Год назад

    How is the water cubby working?🤔 Is there less splashing and spill on the floor/deep litter area? I’d like to build one but would like to know if it was a successful alternative for you.
    Also, do you keep water inside AND outside at the same time during the day? Or only inside in the winter?
    Thanks for your help! ( I hope you see this comment😊)

  • @Lori..
    @Lori.. Год назад +1

    We are building our first coop now and we are trying to figure out the ventilation. With the vents being open all the time we are wondering how the rain and snow stays out. Thank you for any info! 😊🐣

    • @ThesmartestTem
      @ThesmartestTem Год назад +4

      We put our permanently open vents under the roof overhang. Keeps out all the precipitation. Then we have two window style vents we leave open unless it's storming bad or winter.

    • @Lori..
      @Lori.. Год назад

      @@ThesmartestTemthank you! 😊

  • @dearmeecha1310
    @dearmeecha1310 Год назад

    With deep litter do you add new material on top and leave or do you mix in new material and sort of churn like a compost?

  • @ginniecobbett9234
    @ginniecobbett9234 Год назад

    If the coop is walk in and even insulated, do you think in cold climates it would be colder for the hens.We do not heat our coop.

  • @graphguy
    @graphguy Год назад

    As always great info!

  • @noahsturgill20
    @noahsturgill20 Год назад

    How big is you white coop and how many chickens do you have in it and how do you like it I'm looking at building one

  • @boostjunkieMike
    @boostjunkieMike 5 месяцев назад

    👏🏾👌🏾😎👍🏾👍🏾 thanks for sharing. Very useful information

  • @tinakathleen8571
    @tinakathleen8571 Год назад

    We have an amazing metal food feeder with a lid that opens when the chickens stand on it. It keeos food protected and contained in one place. Chickens love it but do need to be older and heavier.

  • @kevindechambeau7762
    @kevindechambeau7762 8 месяцев назад

    I love your hand house. I'm getting ready to transfer a sixteen foot by eight foot snowmobile trailer in two a mobile henhouse coop.

  • @laurieponce775
    @laurieponce775 Год назад

    We tried the hen gear rollaway box but they wouldn’t go near it! Plus it looks so small and we’ve got some big gals. We were going on vacation and thought it would help out the chicken sitter, but a waste of money for us.

  • @jimmyslim1628
    @jimmyslim1628 Год назад

    We found that one box is what worked for ours. Its 4 feet wide, they fought over individual boxes, 2 or 3 wanted it at the same time. We ended up having to get rid of them in town and take them to my moms, they were so noisy and making neighbors mad.

  • @tinakathleen8571
    @tinakathleen8571 Год назад

    Really love this coop. Thank you for this video very helpful revision for us. We have 2 old hens and today adopted another 6 chicks and wanted to rethink and make sure it will all be ready for them in a few weeks. Today just need to find a warmth heater. I was watching another video of yours and i had set up the same box so seems we are on track. I forget how long do chicks need extra warmth?? I will keep investigating all things chickens. Thank you and keep posting.

  • @ebenburger111
    @ebenburger111 Год назад

    Cool! Thank you!

  • @WendysWorldTX
    @WendysWorldTX Год назад

    What kind of chicken is that gold one on the screen with your #1 at the 1:45 mark. She's pretty. 😊

  • @matthaug3104
    @matthaug3104 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks good tips

  • @tinakathleen8571
    @tinakathleen8571 Год назад

    This coop looks like ours and then we fenced around it to extend the free raange but contained space for them. We keep the coop open all the time.

  • @DLRB
    @DLRB Год назад

    I have a 4'x8' sheet of Aluminum for the floor ❤️

  • @Sharkdog11b
    @Sharkdog11b 9 месяцев назад

    Dude your shoulders look great

  • @rebeccaplumlee9601
    @rebeccaplumlee9601 Год назад

    I had basically a doggy door with a carpet scrap, we had to enlarge because the wether i kept in the run liked to sleep inside with his flock... He kept predators away, including snakes

  • @rosewood9839
    @rosewood9839 Год назад

    Can it have a flat roof? My biggest issue is trying to cut the angle to make it higher on the front of the roof. I’ve having giant issues building a coop and if the roof could be flat, that would help me so much! I’m 67 and hubs is sick and I have to do this by myself. Any thoughts?

    • @ThesmartestTem
      @ThesmartestTem Год назад +1

      If you live anywhere that gets any amount of rain, you do not want a flat roof or else any precipitation will collect on the roof and damage it. If you get snow, it can get heavy enough to straight up collapse your roof. There are resources online and on youtube for calculating roof pitch and how to build it.

  • @DWright69420
    @DWright69420 8 месяцев назад

    You need enrichment that's essential too

  • @ginniecobbett9234
    @ginniecobbett9234 Год назад

    Also why is one of my white hens damaging just ONE of my brown eggs every day.We have 6 hens 3 leghorns and 3 Isa brown .One year old in August.

    • @ft3964
      @ft3964 8 месяцев назад

      Put a fake hard egg 🥚 and hopefully it stops damaging the eggs

  • @VeryMiley
    @VeryMiley Год назад +1

    Moisture in the coop during winter comes from chicken droppings.

  • @HiddenBlessingsHomestead
    @HiddenBlessingsHomestead 6 месяцев назад +1

    All our hens use one nest box lol.

    • @user-xi4ec3mm9w
      @user-xi4ec3mm9w 6 месяцев назад

      How many hens do you have? The rule is around 4-5 hens per nesting box.

  • @psiinc
    @psiinc Год назад

    🙏🏾🇺🇸💜

  • @jamesjessee4064
    @jamesjessee4064 Год назад

    👍🙋‍♂️

  • @zunedog31
    @zunedog31 Год назад

    Thats a chicken sedan, it has two doors.

    • @beccabee94
      @beccabee94 8 месяцев назад +1

      Sedans have 4 doors 😅

  • @seekingfurtherlight34
    @seekingfurtherlight34 Год назад

    Almost didnt recognize you. Much prettier natural.

    • @primitivedaisy
      @primitivedaisy Год назад +2

      She always looks natural. What’s your point? 🤷🏽‍♀️