Showing posts with label building a chicken coop in a shed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label building a chicken coop in a shed. Show all posts

Monday, November 29, 2021

Back With the Birds

It’s another beautiful Monday! 

I hope you all had a fantastic Thanksgiving, for those of you that celebrated, and otherwise I hope it was an amazing Thursday.

In my daily chores over the last few weeks I noticed some small issues in the coop since the last big projects I worked on. I should have known that I was jinxing myself when I said I was done working on projects in the chicken coop. Because I was faced with a not-so-small predicament.

My hens quit laying eggs about two weeks ago.

Now, normally, hens will continue laying eggs as long as they have ample food, water, warm shelter, and at least 12-14 hours of sunlight. When there’s less light, this triggers your birds to go into ‘rest’ mode, and they exert more energy to stay warm than in producing eggs.

While I understand it’s pretty normal for a hen’s lay rate to slow or even completely stop during the winter, it’s uncharacteristic for my hens to completely stop laying all together, so I knew there was another factor at play.

I take care to make sure they have food and clean water daily, so I know that the issue probably has something to do with either their shelter, or that they are using their energy to keep warm.

At this point, I had a couple theories I wanted to address, which you can watch here:

 

One

Something I saw for sure was a leak that dripped water straight into the nest boxes when it rains. This is likely one of the reasons my hens aren’t laying, so my highest priority became building a roof or cover over the nest boxes that would block the leak into the boxes.

I’m quite pleased with myself for holding onto the wood from the old coop, since this is where I was able to get the materials to build the cover over the nest boxes.

There was an intact piece of roofing I was easily able to repurpose to act as a block between the leaky section and the nest boxes, along with several spare bits of wood I fashioned into supports.

I actually attempted this mini roof twice.

The first time I’d designed it so it sat too flat. This would potentially encourage the chickens to try to roost on top of it, which would put them in the way of the water, and would definitely break the roof. This design has very little strength to hold up against weight on top of it, so I knew I’d have to change the design to discourage them from trying to sit on top of it.

I was able to redesign it so it sat at a steeper angle, and this is the final product I decided to go with.

Two

It could be that the hens don’t know where to lay their eggs.

I didn’t slowly transition where I wanted them to lay eggs, and took away the old coop, which for many of my hens was the only place they’d ever known to lay.

There’s a relatively simple fix for this that could train my hens to use the nest boxes.

A lot of times you can trick your hens into laying in a particular place by planting fake eggs in that spot. There are plastic eggs you can purchase, you can use golf balls, or you can do what I did – I looked for rocks that looked roughly like the eggs my hens lay in both color and size.

It might take a few days for this trick to work, so don’t get too discouraged if they don’t lay eggs in the desired nests right away.

 

Three

The birds don’t know where to roost.

This could be causing them to sleep in small groups or on their own, which means they’re not conserving energy by sharing body heat at night.

Again, this is an issue because I didn’t slowly transition them from the old coop to the new one.

Ideally, what I probably should have done was move the old coop so it sat inside the new coop building until the birds were accustomed to laying and roosting in the building. Then I could have slowly torn apart the old coop and the birds would still know that they were supposed to stay in the new building.

I didn’t think of that though when I first started the transition, so I have a couple other tricks I can try to finish the transition.

The easiest route I could take to encourage the birds to roost on the new beams I installed for them is to install a temporary heat lamp above them. Since it’s cold out right now, they’ll be drawn to the warmth, and they’ll start roosting together on the new beams.

Once they’re used to roosting there, I should – theoretically – be able to remove the heat lamp, and they’ll all be able to stay warm by sharing body heat.

The other option I have would be to build a wall extension and closable door in the wide opening in the coop. Then I could physically put the birds inside the coop at night, when they’re more docile and easier to catch, and a few days of closing them in the building at night would train them to go there on their own.

They would have warmth inside the coop either way, which could help them start laying eggs again.

 

 

I only had time to try to solve the first two problems, and I discovered that the extension cord I meant to use to reach from the barn to the chicken coop was both too short and unusable.

Which means I’ll need to go back into the coop another time to finish this project.

 

 

Thank you all so much for joining me again for another struggle in starting a homestead, I hope you all have a freaking awesome rest of your week, and I’ll catch you all next time!

 

-Alyx

Friday, November 12, 2021

Finishing the Chicken Mansion

I suppose the title is a bit misleading.

Finishing the Chicken Mansion - FOR NOW. There, that's better.

This past weekend I tackled the last part of the project to finally complete the chicken coop and run to how I wanted it from the beginning. You can watch how I did it here.

Previously, I'd replaced all the bird netting over the top of the run, and built new nest boxes for the birds.

But I couldn't call the job complete until I'd installed new roost spots and torn apart the old coop. I knew that if I left the old coop in the run, that the chickens would continue to use it for laying their eggs and perching on at night.

With their tendency to roost on top of the coop, instead of inside it, and the dramatic (and damp) change of the seasons, I knew this wouldn't be healthy for them.

The only course of action I could see was to completely remove the old coop to force the birds to take shelter elsewhere and effectively 'train' them to use the new options I'd provided.

What I used for this build

  • Two 1 by 4 pieces of lumber, cut to different lengths (specificity doesn't matter), with the ends trimmed at a 45 degree angle 
  • Eight 3 & 1/2 inch wood screws
  • A drill gun
  • My muscles

Thankfully, this week I got some help to finish the project, so it didn't take nearly as long as I'd been expecting it to.

We started with ripping apart and moving all the pieces of the old coop. I figured this would take the longest, and we wanted to maximize the sunshine we got.

I also decided to hold onto the scrap wood. Most of it was in wonderful shape still, despite its age, and I'm sure can be easily cleaned and reused elsewhere on the homestead.

So, for now at least, the wood is sitting in an unused corner in my garden. This space will eventually become where I build my greenhouse, and perhaps these pieces will find a use in there.

Now that the coop was ripped apart it became necessary to install new roost spots. The only other viable spot for the birds to roost until these went up are the nest boxes I'd installed, and I didn't want all 10 birds trying to huddle together on that frame and put unnecessary stress on the screws holding it to the wall.

I picked some scrap wood from our pile, I used two 1 by 4 inch pieces, to fit to that corner.

The length didn't matter to me, as long as they were different lengths. I wanted to tier the perches, and by cutting them to different lengths, it lessens the chance that the birds roosting on the lower beam will get pooped on by the ones on the top.

The only modifications I had to make to the wood after that was to cut the ends to a 45 degree angle so they would sit flush against the walls. This creates a triangle with the walls and the post, and sets the birds back in the most weather-protected corner of the coop.

Once the new perches were installed, it was finally done!

And now I've gotten to the point that I'm happy in the chicken run and coop; the old falling down coop is gone, there are new roosts and lay boxes, and there's bird netting across the entire top of the run. And, as a bonus, I have wood that can be cleaned and reused elsewhere.

Even with all that said, it doesn't necessarily mean that the chicken run or coop is fully DONE.

I'm sure in the future there will need to be projects that happen in with the birds. I might discover that the wide doorway into the coop lets in too much snow during the winter. Or that there should be a system to hang the waterer and feeder so the birds can't poop in them. Who knows. 

For now it's functional, and I'm pleased with the results.


Thanks, as always, for reading. I hope you all have a freaking awesome rest of your week, and I'll see you all again next week!

-Alyx

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