Chickens: 1 year plus, what has worked and what hasn’t (pt 5)

Coop and runs

Coop: My husband built the coop and I love having a shed sized building to house the chickens. We can walk in which makes cleaning out easier and catching chickens easier. There is also plenty of room for storage. I originally planned to section the coop in half so that I could house a mother hen and the chicks in one side separate from the adult flock. I don’t think that is going to happen, but having the option is nice. I do hang a waterer inside, but all the food and the rest of the waterers are outside the coop. (I have 5 water stations for 11 chickens. Texas summers are hot.)

Runs: My husband also built four runs off the front and side of the coop. The main run, which is open all the time, runs along the side and across the front. This is where their food, water, and dust baths reside. I have three other runs with latched doors. The original idea was the center run would be a garden, but with the surrounding trees it doesn’t get enough light. The next idea was to rotate the chickens through the three runs so they would have fresh grass. After carefully tending grass growth for a week, it takes the chickens one day to take it all down to bare earth. Ugh. I am currently leaving the farthest run open all the time (this run is the chicken’s favorite because it has the most perches and overlooks the meadow) and alternating growing forage seed in the other two runs. The runs are enclosed with hardware cloth that is also buried about a foot down all around the coop. Inside the runs we used less expensive poultry wire. There are swings in two of the runs, and the chickens do jump on them occasionally. What they really love are the natural branches lashed to the framework.

And I wondered why the other branch broke

Situating the coop and runs in the low point of the meadow has given us some drainage issues, but some creative ditch digging solves most of the unwanted flooding, except in really heavy rains.

Using a wooden dowel on an outside latch – fail

Something that definitely failed from heavy rains was the rotating latch on the outside run door. The tolerances were a little tight, and when the wooden dowel swelled from moisture it would get stuck in the pass through hole. Eventually the dowel tore in two from being twisted when wet. Oops.

So I think that is it for now! I’ll probably think of other things to share later, but a 5 part post will have to do for this week. Tomorrow I’ll go back to my regularly scheduled program of random rotating subjects.