executive summari : Manny J. Williams
Building a Successful Chicken Coop in 7 Easy-To-Follow Steps
Having a chicken coop is a good way to become self sufficient. Chickens can provide eggs for baking and cooking. Chickens require a relatively small place compared to other farm animals.
So if you are confident that you'd like to build a chicken coop and care for the chickens, then read on!Step #1 - Chicken Coop Construction - Get Prepared With Plans!
Get the correct materials including materials for insulation. You will need insulation to keep the chickens warm during the winter. However, if you live somewhere that it gets below freezing you will need to install heating where the chickens will be roosting and laying their eggs. The dimensions of your coop directly depends on the number of the chickens you want.
Step #2 - Base Frames and What to Do With Them
Make sure that your chickens are going to have 2 square feet of space per chicken. If you are in lowlands build it up. Lay the base frame and floor. the dimensions will vary depending on your requirements.
Step #3 - Building the Walls
Next, build the frame for the walls. Make sure the beams are approximately 1 to 2 feet apart depending on the desired size. Since the roof will be slanted, it is important that the wall frames are the same size.
Make sure that the measurements for each frame strut matches one another. The back wall struts should be the same size as the last strut on the side wall frame.
Step #4 - The Walls Are Up, Now What?
Once the wall struts are up, the roof struts can be laid across the top of the side wall frames. You can choose which side you want a door, but a door is necessary to clean the interior of the coop and put down food when needed.
The side of the wall that the door is going to be put in will need the struts to be closer where the door frame is being placed. Place a beam cross section between the two struts that make the door frame high enough for you to get under. Across the top of the door frame, attach at least one more short strut from the top of the door frame to the roof. Using steel or aluminum angle supports is useful in ensuring that the structure is sound. Screws instead of nails hold better, as well.
Step #5 - Building Nesting Boxes for Your Chickens
Building the nesting boxes should be done after the wall frames are installed, but before the inside walls are hung. Access doors for them should be placed on the outside to ensure that you can access the eggs and clean the nests as needed. Put in as many nesting boxes as you have chickens. Chickens will sometimes share boxes, but you do not want to depend on this.
After the nesting boxes are finished, cut wall panels to the specifications needed. Install the wall panel on the inside of the coop to enclose it, keeping in mind doors and windows. Once those are installed, insulate the walls from the outside before hanging the outside wall panels. Tack up the insulation between the struts, again keeping in mind the windows and doors. After the insulation its hung, hang the outside wall panels.
The back wall will be nearly solid, except for a small hole in the wall that will be used as an exit for the chickens. You should cut the hole approximately 12-24 inches in diameter. Put a sloped plank for the chickens to enter and exit down. Once this is all complete, you can add your desired type or style window of choice, as well as a door.
Building the roost depends on what is needed. Take wooden dowels, cutting them to the desired length, then fastening them to a small wooden plate. Your major concern should be keeping your chickens safe. Once the chicken coop is up, it is best to build what is call a chicken run. This fence can come out from the coop about six feet, but can be further if you need it. It should stand about six feet high. The design is going to be simple, but a bit like the frame for the chicken coop walls.
once the frame work is up, attach chicken wire the height and length of the wall, but dig a trench on the inside of the chicken run and run the wire fencing wider so that it goes into the ground and lays flat, about twelve to eighteen inches out from the wall itself.
Step #7 - Dealing With the Chicken Wire
Cover the chicken wire back up to make sure that the chickens do not get tangled in it. Running the wire under the ground is done so that if a fox or other ground based predator tries to dig under the fence, they will not get past the chicken wire under the ground. When you are wanting to protect against air born predators, like chicken hawks, cover the entire area of the chicken run from wall to wall with chicken wire across the top.
If you build your own door into the coop area, make sure to cross the frame work of the door with two beams to support the weight of the door before attaching the wire to it. For the walls of the chicken run, it is not necessary to use chicken wire. You can use almost any kind of wire fencing, but for the enclosure roof, it is best to use chicken wire as the links are smaller.
These instructions can vary depending on the needs. Add color as well as making your windows and doors have shapes.
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