9:00.... 30 year carpenter here. The direction if your diagonal doesn't matter that much. You're right that the other way is proper, and might matter a bit more with a larger or heavier door. It does what it needs to in this case.
Growing up my next-door neighbors had 4 buff orpingtons in their yard, and they were awesome. They would run to the fence to say hi to me when I got off the school bus and I even became the neighbor's "chicken sitter" and would go sit in the coop with the girls and cuddle them! I can't wait to have my own chickens in a beautiful little coup like this one :)
So funny! My sister literally was just gifted baby chicks a couple days ago, unexpectedly. She's been looking at chicken coops nonstop since and instantly sent this video over to her once I saw it pop up in my feed. Thank you for being so thorough with the coop tour!
I also have chickens and their two things that I would recommend this is my second flock that you feed the baby chickens scrambled eggs it is good protein for them and it will teach them to eat out of your hand the second thing that and they will be very friendly and you can pet them and touch them and they will fly to you and land on your shoulder. Also mealworm treats are such a great way to get them to come if you want them to get back in their Coop you shake the bag they also love to eat it out of your hand and as they get older I don't use the eggs as much but the meal worms and then of course with the corn the scratch and I also give them fresh vegetable scraps and blueberries and strawberries good luck with your chicks
We are currently building a coop/run from mostly reclaimed wood our neighbor threw away after a remodel. It is definitely more challenging to “make it work” but also rewarding. My husband is a master repurposer, lol. We have enjoyed some very useful and beautiful “silk purses” in our 40 years of marriage. I’m grateful! Thanks for the tour.
It is a much much more involved process when nothing is straight and flat to begin with haha. It is indeed a significantly more rewarding end product though.
I am so impressed with you and your girlfriend. I applaud you both for doing all of the research before building the chicken coop and which type of chickens you were adopting. There is so much detail and care into having your own chickens and what they need. Your detailed information was amazing 🤩
Your golden chicken really loves you. I spotted her looking at you from time to time when the other chickens are looking elsewhere. She is studying your facial expressions. Very sweet girl.
A coop built on high ground and built up to avoid water not on low swamp land. Makes a big of difference. Love the windows for adjustable ventilation. Great job!
Wonderfully detailed and instructional video! There's nothing better than someone explaining their decision processes, including lessons learned. Thank you for this!!
Love this! I've got one of those cheesy pre-made coops - that I attempted to "beef-up" with more hardware cloth. It's still hangin' in there (including my "redneck repairs!") After 8+ years. If I had it to do over again, I'd do something more like this. But I'm loving the flock and sharing the bounty with friends and neighbors ❤ That's all that matters!
My chickens were great mousers, and rats that snuck in didn't always make it out. My Barred Rocks were the best hunters, protectors, hardy, great layers and the friendliest. I love your coop and area. Great Job!
We live in SD County as well, Santa Ysabel. My family is building our own coop, we just got our first chickens a couple weeks ago (Wellsprings). Thank you for your info and detail, helps a lot!
Great coop! Thanks for the tour. FYI, I use shade cloth over the top of the run. It doesn't require as much infrastructure up top to secure it. It has kept everything out, especially wild birds, which can spread disease (rare, but it can happen). As an added bonus, my cats love to lounge on the shade cloth. It's like a big hammock for them, and it keeps them on the job - they are great mousers! Finally, I'm in Albuquerque so the shade cloth does a great job of keeping their run cooler in the worst of the summer heat.
It’s awesome. I watch the channel The Chateau Diaries and they have a walled garden with an old orchard on one side (most of the older fruit trees that don’t bear are getting replaced, but a couple large old ones have been there!). They decided to move their chickens over to that side, add some coops, and fence in some large runs, to keep them from disturbing the veggie garden (and keep the males separate as well). Seems like an orchard is the ideal place for chickens, since they clean up dropped fruit and eat bugs/pests, and provide constant soil fertilizer!
Chickens and orchards absolutely go hand in hand the synergies just make so much sense. Those French walled gardens are quite the sight, very cool that they have such a deep culture for gardening.
@@crochetingaroundnewzealand I don’t know that they have a whole video just on it. It’s probably in one of the regular vlogs; they built a small new coop and put the fencing in the orchard this year. Their chickens were previously on the opposite side of their walled garden, in part of an outbuilding (some of the chickens might still be using that space? Unsure).
I raised chickens for many years, strictly for eggs and coincidentally for entertainment, pest control and making soils richer. Your thick wood shavings in your coup, with 6 months between changing? To me that would seem like a lot of ammonia build up...I hope you did your research. I love chickens and often get choked up when I see a happy flock...I miss my girls terribly! Keep the great videos coming J!! Thank You!
Its for sure something that we are playing with but the deep litter method seems pretty popular. We stir it up and add fresh shavings on a fairly regular basis.
Hello from North SD County. You have inspired me to create a chicken orchard and to improve the coop (to include predator proofing with more hardware cloth, proper use of reclaimed wood, and relocating the passion fruit). Thank you for sharing your chicken experience! 🐓 🌱 🏠
I've got a coop made out of old decking too. Great job on the apron! For your nesting box lid, attach a loop of string to the inside of the nesting box lid and when the lid is open, loop the string on a hook or something on the coop wall, I do that for mine.
I agree with all of your security features against raccoons. We've had them invade our coops several times, and they kill everything they can catch, and will return for the carcasses later. One even chased a 20lb. goose back into our barn and killed her in a stall. I set traps, which it evaded, around the carcass, and the dang thing dragged the body over a 6 ft. stall wall to get it out of the barn, if that gives you an idea of their strength and determination. When 3 ducks went missing I found the remains up in the barn loft which doesn't even have a ladder to reach it.
I love that you reused as much as possible. And great tip about the carabiners. I will be getting chickens this Spring and we have lots of Racoons so I appreciate the security tips.
I absolutely enjoyed this video & hated to see it come to an end. You & Katrina are applauded on doing such an amazing job on the chicken coop. I've always wanted chickens & have been so intimidated. I love y'all Coop & run. My dream is still alive & may one day be able to have my chickens too. Also thanks for being such an engaging teacher.
Nice video. Maybe the first one I've watched from you. I've seen you on Kevin's channel a bunch of times. Lol to the door brace. Yeah, I think we've all done that. A tip if you're interested in the chicken water bucket. I run drip irrigation to all my beds, and I live in the desert so the beds get watered several times a day from the timer. I once had my single water bucket fail due to it breaking off the rope it was on. Luckily I was home and heard the chicks squawking. It's often 110F here in the summer so that's not going to end well if I was at work all day. What I did was to install two buckets (I use the water nipples that screw into the bottom). My buckets are food grade dark black...(no light gets through so no algae grows in them). I also have swamp cooler floats installed in the buckets, and those floats are connected to my nearest raised beds via cheap 1/4" drip tube. Every time the beds get watered, the buckets get filled until the float turns them off. Long story long, I haven't had to manually add water in almost two years! Two buckets gives me peace of mind that if one fails, it's highly unlikely the other will before I can repair the first. I'm also a hermit. Have a good one brother! Nice coop, and I appreciate your nice mellow way of narrating and giving information. Any plans for some free range rabbits to go in that awesome chicken food forest? I'm thinking about trying them out in my system. Have a good one!
Rigging up an autofill sounds nice, especially once we get into the summer that would be a great idea! No plans for rabbits as we are already pretty loaded in pets now haha
First of your videos to me. You are a great teacher! I really appreciate your view of finishing the wood. That somehow has gone by the wayside nowadays.
I like a lot how informative your videos are. However, I would recommend you to keep the same smiley and spontaneous personality that you show with Kevin =) Personally, I feel a lot more attracted to channels that make me have a fun time while I learn, not only learn. Keep it up =)
Thanks for the tour. I've really enjoyed your videos on your channel and on Epic Gardening. Looking forward to seeing more from you. I love the names your chickens.
I love chickens!! Had Rhode Island Reds years ago and will be building a coop in the next year (most likely). Thanks so much for all the great information!❤✌
You showed up in my feed, I liked what I watched, so subscribed! You did a wonderful job building that coop and the extra sitting/ extra chicken run. All pleasing to the eye & functional, great!
Jacques what a cool coop! Good work, that looks pretty stellar, and I loved the reclaimed wood. One tiny tip is on that wooden gate, if you put the crossbar the other way, connecting the other two corners, it'll be 10x stronger. Still looks great though!
Haha this killed us because we had thought that through a bunch and then when we went to staple the backing on we entirely forgot to consider orientation, real facepalm moment.
I like your idea about the metal mesh on the ground. I was going to do that but I heard of another idea and it’s to put flat patio block I think they are 6 inch by 12 inches can’t remember. But you put them up close to the fence and they won’t dig because they usually try to dig close the fence and it works great never had a problem. Just a tip that’s all. Great video by the way. 👍
hey Jacques, dont think we didnt notice the Star Wars font you used in this video 😂 Lovely video, especially the passionfruit comment, thats something I never heard before, now Im even more excited to have my own chickens in the future!
Charming and secure coop. You can get J clips to fasten pieces of hardware cloth together. Amazon and local feed stores have them. You see them used on rabbit hutches a lot. I got rat proof hanging feeders that close with the weight of a rat or mouse on them (along with a hardware cloth enclosed run). They are pricey and a pain to clean out. But, rats can jump 3 feet, so hanging feeders up a foot off the ground won't help much. Treadle feeders won't work for me because of fire ants.
Thank you for the rec on the J clips, I hadn't heard of those before! I am honestly surprised at myself for not looking up potential existing solutions. I've seen those feeders before, if we can't solve the problem through hardware cloth I will look into those!
If you get a crimping tool and some crimps you can secure the hardware cloth or steel mesh (as we call it here in Australia) together, looks neat too and is cheap. 👍
@@jacquesinthegarden I bought one in a local Bunnings Store here in Australia to build an instant birdcage I needed to store a tame cockatoo for a short while, worked great!
Great video.. just remember chickens need sunshine too for egg laying. I have string strung in my backyard with reflector tape on it to keep hawks away. It works great. I keep a boom box playing during the day to keep other things away. I have 5 girls.
I love the video its a great help. I am building one with some fence posts i removed from a job. I have been using a mobile cart but we are transitioning to a permanant coop/run, so thanks for sharing!
I know this video is a year old but do you ever find the hens jump up on top of the other run part or the house, or hop the fences you have? Or do you clip their wings?
In my experience, if there is a top bar or beam on a fence the chickens will jump up to it and be over it, even larger breeds, even if the fence is very high. If there is not a bar or beam or board along the top of the fence, if it's just wire, most chickens can't seem to figure out that the fence in their way even has a top to get over. It doesn't seem to be the height of the fence at all, but what they can see or not see at the top of the fence. I currently have a rooster "confined" behind a two foot tall fence during the day. He roosts higher than that. (This doesn't count for Sumatras, which I believe have a death wish, fly well, and won't stay in a fence if they can find any way out of it.)
Love the video! Want to warn you of 2 things though. Those auto doors are great but raccons can figure them out. I lost a whole flock to raccones in one night cause of the auto door that I had (I even took a few extra steps to make it more safe). So while they are nice for the convenience I wouldn't recommend them. Also I've had my chickens jump a 5 ft fence just to freak out that they where on the wrong side of the fence. It didn't happen to often but at least once every 2 months I had to go chasing one of them down to get back in the yard and I had cut their wings as well...
Did you ever have problems with your pets and the chickens? I would love to have chickens someday but I have three dogs who can be quite tenacious…the clip of your dog just chilling with them through the fence is amazing
We always kept them separated with a barrier but also would hold the chickens up to the dogs and show them they are fine. We made the decision at the start to just always have a fence in place and leave it at that and so we have had no issues.
We should be able to get at least 6 total with plenty of space if they only have access to that enclosed run but with the new orchard area we could definitely get away with even more.
You did a great job on your coop! I live in San Diego, too. The raccoons and coyotes are relentless. I lost one hen a couple days ago. I thought the chicken tunnel I made was strong enough to deter raccoons. Now I’m a little worried about using only a carabiner to lock my nesting boxes. I’m going to check on Amazon to see if there is a better lock that is raccoon proof. Will let you know if I find one.
@@jacquesinthegarden Thank you for responding. I ended up ordering some carabiners to use with my hasp and latch. The carabiners have a screw that makes them harder to open. Happy New Year! 🎊 🎉🎶
Seeing Chirp jump into your lap for loves was the sweetest thing I saw in ages!
9:00.... 30 year carpenter here. The direction if your diagonal doesn't matter that much. You're right that the other way is proper, and might matter a bit more with a larger or heavier door. It does what it needs to in this case.
In critical applications, You want the load on the door to compress your diagonal, not put tension on it.
Growing up my next-door neighbors had 4 buff orpingtons in their yard, and they were awesome. They would run to the fence to say hi to me when I got off the school bus and I even became the neighbor's "chicken sitter" and would go sit in the coop with the girls and cuddle them! I can't wait to have my own chickens in a beautiful little coup like this one :)
They are quite lovely birds!
Seeing Chirp jump into your lap for loves was the sweetest thing I saw in ages! ❤
So funny! My sister literally was just gifted baby chicks a couple days ago, unexpectedly. She's been looking at chicken coops nonstop since and instantly sent this video over to her once I saw it pop up in my feed. Thank you for being so thorough with the coop tour!
Haha it was frustrating shopping around for coops as the price ranges are so dramatic and many don't seem to have the right features.
I also have chickens and their two things that I would recommend this is my second flock that you feed the baby chickens scrambled eggs it is good protein for them and it will teach them to eat out of your hand the second thing that and they will be very friendly and you can pet them and touch them and they will fly to you and land on your shoulder. Also mealworm treats are such a great way to get them to come if you want them to get back in their Coop you shake the bag they also love to eat it out of your hand and as they get older I don't use the eggs as much but the meal worms and then of course with the corn the scratch and I also give them fresh vegetable scraps and blueberries and strawberries good luck with your chicks
Kudos to you that your algorithm picked up what your sister needed. Family dynamics off the charts lol
We are currently building a coop/run from mostly reclaimed wood our neighbor threw away after a remodel. It is definitely more challenging to “make it work” but also rewarding. My husband is a master repurposer, lol. We have enjoyed some very useful and beautiful “silk purses” in our 40 years of marriage. I’m grateful!
Thanks for the tour.
It is a much much more involved process when nothing is straight and flat to begin with haha. It is indeed a significantly more rewarding end product though.
I am so impressed with you and your girlfriend. I applaud you both for doing all of the research before building the chicken coop and which type of chickens you were adopting. There is so much detail and care into having your own chickens and what they need. Your detailed information was amazing 🤩
Finding a watching this saved us a lot of digging in our rocky New England soil. The PVC coated wire apron is genius! Great coop and run.
Your golden chicken really loves you. I spotted her looking at you from time to time when the other chickens are looking elsewhere. She is studying your facial expressions. Very sweet girl.
I did it myself with the Woodglut plans. I think this is the best way to find out how to build it.
I'm rewatching this, and Jacques saying, "If you are a raccoon," immediately made me imagine a raccoon watching this video making notes.
A coop built on high ground and built up to avoid water not on low swamp land. Makes a big of difference. Love the windows for adjustable ventilation. Great job!
Wonderfully detailed and instructional video! There's nothing better than someone explaining their decision processes, including lessons learned. Thank you for this!!
Love this! I've got one of those cheesy pre-made coops - that I attempted to "beef-up" with more hardware cloth. It's still hangin' in there (including my "redneck repairs!") After 8+ years.
If I had it to do over again, I'd do something more like this. But I'm loving the flock and sharing the bounty with friends and neighbors ❤ That's all that matters!
My chickens were great mousers, and rats that snuck in didn't always make it out. My Barred Rocks were the best hunters, protectors, hardy, great layers and the friendliest. I love your coop and area. Great Job!
Good info, we have been thinking of adding another 2!
We live in SD County as well, Santa Ysabel. My family is building our own coop, we just got our first chickens a couple weeks ago (Wellsprings). Thank you for your info and detail, helps a lot!
Great coop! Thanks for the tour. FYI, I use shade cloth over the top of the run. It doesn't require as much infrastructure up top to secure it. It has kept everything out, especially wild birds, which can spread disease (rare, but it can happen). As an added bonus, my cats love to lounge on the shade cloth. It's like a big hammock for them, and it keeps them on the job - they are great mousers! Finally, I'm in Albuquerque so the shade cloth does a great job of keeping their run cooler in the worst of the summer heat.
I should just get some shade cloth and add it up there as a permanent feature, not sure why I didn't think of that actually.
It’s awesome. I watch the channel The Chateau Diaries and they have a walled garden with an old orchard on one side (most of the older fruit trees that don’t bear are getting replaced, but a couple large old ones have been there!). They decided to move their chickens over to that side, add some coops, and fence in some large runs, to keep them from disturbing the veggie garden (and keep the males separate as well). Seems like an orchard is the ideal place for chickens, since they clean up dropped fruit and eat bugs/pests, and provide constant soil fertilizer!
Chickens and orchards absolutely go hand in hand the synergies just make so much sense. Those French walled gardens are quite the sight, very cool that they have such a deep culture for gardening.
I looked at that channel. Can't see anything about a chicken coop or orchard.
@@crochetingaroundnewzealand I don’t know that they have a whole video just on it. It’s probably in one of the regular vlogs; they built a small new coop and put the fencing in the orchard this year. Their chickens were previously on the opposite side of their walled garden, in part of an outbuilding (some of the chickens might still be using that space? Unsure).
I raised chickens for many years, strictly for eggs and coincidentally for entertainment, pest control and making soils richer. Your thick wood shavings in your coup, with 6 months between changing? To me that would seem like a lot of ammonia build up...I hope you did your research. I love chickens and often get choked up when I see a happy flock...I miss my girls terribly! Keep the great videos coming J!! Thank You!
Its for sure something that we are playing with but the deep litter method seems pretty popular. We stir it up and add fresh shavings on a fairly regular basis.
Hello from North SD County. You have inspired me to create a chicken orchard and to improve the coop (to include predator proofing with more hardware cloth, proper use of reclaimed wood, and relocating the passion fruit). Thank you for sharing your chicken experience! 🐓 🌱 🏠
ruclips.net/video/iKoBujiJyfc/видео.html
I've got a coop made out of old decking too. Great job on the apron! For your nesting box lid, attach a loop of string to the inside of the nesting box lid and when the lid is open, loop the string on a hook or something on the coop wall, I do that for mine.
Sounds like a nice simple solution thanks for the tip!
Love how detailed this video is. Thank you! Love getting new ideas especially for the chickens.
I un-subscribed from another RUclipsr because they were shopping for a multi-thousand dollar coop.
This I can relate to.
If its epic gardening or epic homesteading, him and Jacques and friends and Jacques is his emploie, just fyi
You're channel was recommended. I'm glad i clicked on you're video! SUBSCRIBED!!!! 👍
You did a great job explaining and providing details on how to build a chicken coop.
I agree with all of your security features against raccoons. We've had them invade our coops several times, and they kill everything they can catch, and will return for the carcasses later. One even chased a 20lb. goose back into our barn and killed her in a stall. I set traps, which it evaded, around the carcass, and the dang thing dragged the body over a 6 ft. stall wall to get it out of the barn, if that gives you an idea of their strength and determination. When 3 ducks went missing I found the remains up in the barn loft which doesn't even have a ladder to reach it.
This is exactly what I was trying to avoid, we have seen racoons as big as medium sized dogs in our yard so we weren't going to be taking any chances!
Love the coop ideas! We’re all about repurpose/reuse here 👍
Your girls have a nice big area to keep them happy 😃. 👵🏻👩🌾❣️
Great information, i love the way you explain every detail, and most of all love the ending of video when chicken jump and hang out with you ❤️💚
ruclips.net/video/iKoBujiJyfc/видео.html
I love that you reused as much as possible. And great tip about the carabiners.
I will be getting chickens this Spring and we have lots of Racoons so I appreciate the security tips.
comprehensive planning and execution is satisfying
So much great info and pointers on building a chicken coop! My MIL has 15 chickens and they’re surprisingly friendly and total goof balls.
I absolutely enjoyed this video & hated to see it come to an end. You & Katrina are applauded on doing such an amazing job on the chicken coop. I've always wanted chickens & have been so intimidated. I love y'all Coop & run.
My dream is still alive & may one day be able to have my chickens too.
Also thanks for being such an engaging teacher.
What a great set up... and the cabinet doors make it just adorable!
ruclips.net/video/iKoBujiJyfc/видео.html
Shalom! Such a darling Chx Coop. I gleamed many ideas and treasures from you and yours. Thank you and Blessings! From Norco, California.
Nice video. Maybe the first one I've watched from you. I've seen you on Kevin's channel a bunch of times. Lol to the door brace. Yeah, I think we've all done that. A tip if you're interested in the chicken water bucket. I run drip irrigation to all my beds, and I live in the desert so the beds get watered several times a day from the timer. I once had my single water bucket fail due to it breaking off the rope it was on. Luckily I was home and heard the chicks squawking. It's often 110F here in the summer so that's not going to end well if I was at work all day. What I did was to install two buckets (I use the water nipples that screw into the bottom). My buckets are food grade dark black...(no light gets through so no algae grows in them). I also have swamp cooler floats installed in the buckets, and those floats are connected to my nearest raised beds via cheap 1/4" drip tube. Every time the beds get watered, the buckets get filled until the float turns them off. Long story long, I haven't had to manually add water in almost two years! Two buckets gives me peace of mind that if one fails, it's highly unlikely the other will before I can repair the first.
I'm also a hermit. Have a good one brother! Nice coop, and I appreciate your nice mellow way of narrating and giving information.
Any plans for some free range rabbits to go in that awesome chicken food forest? I'm thinking about trying them out in my system.
Have a good one!
Rigging up an autofill sounds nice, especially once we get into the summer that would be a great idea! No plans for rabbits as we are already pretty loaded in pets now haha
@@jacquesinthegarden Thanks for taking the time to reply. Subbed. Keep up the good work, and happy holidays!
I'd love a one year in review video on this coop :)
First of your videos to me. You are a great teacher! I really appreciate your view of finishing the wood. That somehow has gone by the wayside nowadays.
I like a lot how informative your videos are. However, I would recommend you to keep the same smiley and spontaneous personality that you show with Kevin =) Personally, I feel a lot more attracted to channels that make me have a fun time while I learn, not only learn. Keep it up =)
Thanks for the tour. I've really enjoyed your videos on your channel and on Epic Gardening. Looking forward to seeing more from you. I love the names your chickens.
ruclips.net/video/iKoBujiJyfc/видео.html
I love your dog and your chickens! They are so adorable! And I love your channel. Thank you Jacques!
ruclips.net/video/iKoBujiJyfc/видео.html
Inspiring! I’m saving this video for our spring chicken plan! Thanks, Jacques!
Thank you, this was the best video that I’ve seen on construction and security!
Took me a while to get to this video with the holidays but I had been really looking forward it. Thanks so much!
I love chickens!! Had Rhode Island Reds years ago and will be building a coop in the next year (most likely). Thanks so much for all the great information!❤✌
You guys are both so cute together and talented ❤❤❤
Very nicely done! I made mine out of an old dog kennel. Hardware cloth is extremely important yes!
Your smoothest video yet!
And very good info too.
Thank You ❤
You showed up in my feed, I liked what I watched, so subscribed!
You did a wonderful job building that coop and the extra sitting/ extra chicken run. All pleasing to the eye & functional, great!
Chicken litter seems like it would be so important for a great garden.
I didn't mention it much but we will compost it and add in to the garden for sure!
Jacques what a cool coop! Good work, that looks pretty stellar, and I loved the reclaimed wood. One tiny tip is on that wooden gate, if you put the crossbar the other way, connecting the other two corners, it'll be 10x stronger. Still looks great though!
Haha this killed us because we had thought that through a bunch and then when we went to staple the backing on we entirely forgot to consider orientation, real facepalm moment.
I like your idea about the metal mesh on the ground. I was going to do that but I heard of another idea and it’s to put flat patio block I think they are 6 inch by 12 inches can’t remember. But you put them up close to the fence and they won’t dig because they usually try to dig close the fence and it works great never had a problem. Just a tip that’s all. Great video by the way. 👍
LOL - Your lovely ladies are lucky ladies, to be so well cared for! All of your tips are awesome!
Great video and details. Thanks for sharing!
Another very informative video. Thanks for making it entertaining. I really enjoy your laid back style. Keep the videos coming.
Jack! Your hat in your thumbnail tricked me! I thought you were Geoff Lawton! 😂 I guess the chickens don't mind.
hey Jacques, dont think we didnt notice the Star Wars font you used in this video 😂
Lovely video, especially the passionfruit comment, thats something I never heard before, now Im even more excited to have my own chickens in the future!
Haha, it seems to be working!
Love it. About to build our own coop this spring, right now the girls are stuck with a kitchen playset.
I am for sure glad we did it this way but it definitely expect it to take twice as long as you expect!
I’ve seen bank vaults less secure than this chicken coop I love it
We are DIY building our first coop in the next few weeks!! Perfect timing, great video thanks 😄
Good luck!!
Great video. Love chickens. Wish I could have some. Thank you for sharing! 🐓
Oh lil Chirp! What a bunch of beautiful lil chickadees ❤
Hi. Kevin from EG brought me to your channel. I'm really enjoying the journey with you. Can't wait for the next post.
Thanks for coming, that is great to hear!
Charming and secure coop. You can get J clips to fasten pieces of hardware cloth together. Amazon and local feed stores have them. You see them used on rabbit hutches a lot. I got rat proof hanging feeders that close with the weight of a rat or mouse on them (along with a hardware cloth enclosed run). They are pricey and a pain to clean out. But, rats can jump 3 feet, so hanging feeders up a foot off the ground won't help much. Treadle feeders won't work for me because of fire ants.
Thank you for the rec on the J clips, I hadn't heard of those before! I am honestly surprised at myself for not looking up potential existing solutions. I've seen those feeders before, if we can't solve the problem through hardware cloth I will look into those!
If you get a crimping tool and some crimps you can secure the hardware cloth or steel mesh (as we call it here in Australia) together, looks neat too and is cheap. 👍
That is a great idea, I never really thought to look for solutions to joining hardware cloth together for some reason!
@@jacquesinthegarden I bought one in a local Bunnings Store here in Australia to build an instant birdcage I needed to store a tame cockatoo for a short while, worked great!
Hey Jacques!! Saw you on the Epic Gardening channel. Love your contributions and insight! God bless!
✋🏻 me too
Your coop is awesome. Thanks for the information.
Great video.. just remember chickens need sunshine too for egg laying. I have string strung in my backyard with reflector tape on it to keep hawks away. It works great. I keep a boom box playing during the day to keep other things away. I have 5 girls.
They do usually get plenty of sun, but maybe it is time to take the burlap down
Another fab informative video thanks Jacques.
Great video! Totally doable, love the orchard area.
We can’t raise chickens in my city, Fresno, but I really enjoyed seeing your coop tour. Thank you.
Unfortunate are you allowed smaller birds like quail?
another excellent video. full of helpful information
Very Helpful video. Thank you for sharing with us.
Very nice video and very nice chicken you got. Thank you for sharing God bless you and yours. By the way nice design of the coop.
I love the video its a great help. I am building one with some fence posts i removed from a job. I have been using a mobile cart but we are transitioning to a permanant coop/run, so thanks for sharing!
this is the most over engineered and bougie coop and i love it.
Great job. I love the look of it.
Love this! I hope I can have chickens in the future 🐔
I know this video is a year old but do you ever find the hens jump up on top of the other run part or the house, or hop the fences you have? Or do you clip their wings?
subscribed!!! Can't wait for more chicken content.
In my experience, if there is a top bar or beam on a fence the chickens will jump up to it and be over it, even larger breeds, even if the fence is very high. If there is not a bar or beam or board along the top of the fence, if it's just wire, most chickens can't seem to figure out that the fence in their way even has a top to get over. It doesn't seem to be the height of the fence at all, but what they can see or not see at the top of the fence. I currently have a rooster "confined" behind a two foot tall fence during the day. He roosts higher than that.
(This doesn't count for Sumatras, which I believe have a death wish, fly well, and won't stay in a fence if they can find any way out of it.)
Love the video! Want to warn you of 2 things though. Those auto doors are great but raccons can figure them out. I lost a whole flock to raccones in one night cause of the auto door that I had (I even took a few extra steps to make it more safe). So while they are nice for the convenience I wouldn't recommend them. Also I've had my chickens jump a 5 ft fence just to freak out that they where on the wrong side of the fence. It didn't happen to often but at least once every 2 months I had to go chasing one of them down to get back in the yard and I had cut their wings as well...
Thankyou mate extremely educational video!!!❤❤🙏
I LOVE this coop!
Best explanation!
Did you ever have problems with your pets and the chickens? I would love to have chickens someday but I have three dogs who can be quite tenacious…the clip of your dog just chilling with them through the fence is amazing
We always kept them separated with a barrier but also would hold the chickens up to the dogs and show them they are fine. We made the decision at the start to just always have a fence in place and leave it at that and so we have had no issues.
You likely know this, but you could easily store a few more with an awesome setup like that!
We should be able to get at least 6 total with plenty of space if they only have access to that enclosed run but with the new orchard area we could definitely get away with even more.
Good thing you don't have bears 😂
Great info!! Very informative!
Chirp is the star of the show, 😆
Love the coop!
Awww! Your buff orpington hen is so sweet! I wish mine was... shes s total witch!
Haha I guess they aren't all good!
That back unused part by the roosts would be a good brooder ;)
Not a bad idea!
Do you have any flys? Thats what I would be worries about. I know chickens eat them but I wonder about that🤷🏻♀️
Another great view
I miss having chickens!!!
Great diy ,love to have chickens and home grown eggs,but I don't like mass,but will see.
You did a great job on your coop! I live in San Diego, too. The raccoons and coyotes are relentless. I lost one hen a couple days ago. I thought the chicken tunnel I made was strong enough to deter raccoons. Now I’m a little worried about using only a carabiner to lock my nesting boxes. I’m going to check on Amazon to see if there is a better lock that is raccoon proof. Will let you know if I find one.
My understanding was that a hasp and latch was harder for them which is why we went for that.
@@jacquesinthegarden Thank you for responding. I ended up ordering some carabiners to use with my hasp and latch. The carabiners have a screw that makes them harder to open. Happy New Year! 🎊 🎉🎶
Excellent video! I love your girls. They do make sweet "pets."
Are you saying spar urethane? I have never heard of that before.
Hardware cloth is the best! “Chicken wire” can let in mice, rats and snakes. Good to know.