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Supplies: Landscape timbers to use for framing the hen house.

Welded fence wire and chicken wire. (Ignore the tomato stakes.)

The PLANS! (Scratched on the back of an envelope.)

(View 1–aerial. View 2–frontal.)
Dimensions of the chicken yard are to be about 18 feet by 10 feet. The hen house structure will be another 18 feet by 10 feet. The chicken yard fence will be made with welded fence wire and chicken wire along the bottom. The hen house structure will be made with barn wood up to three feet high and the top three feet will be made with chicken wire. Roof will be made of corrugated tin. Door to hen house made of wood and screen. Flooring made with wooden pallets and straw. (Pallets to be removable for cleaning and to let air circulate under the floor.) Wooden nesting boxes and straw, with doors to the outside for egg collection. A roost for handy access to nesting boxes. A ramp down to the yard. Satellite TV and internet to keep the hens entertained. A gate for access, and another gate to let the chickens out into the road.
52 is building the chicken house. I’m a helper. I might bring him something to drink if he gets thirsty, or remind him that he’s cute if he needs some encouragement.
Not that we know what we’re doing. Advice?
This chicken house is, of course, for my as-of-yet non-existent chickens. But starting to prepare for the chickens makes them seem a lot more real. I’ve never had chickens before. And truth? I’m a little bit scared. I want chickens. But I don’t really know anything about how to take care of them. I’ve got a lot to learn.
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on March 23, 2008
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
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March 2010
"Lamb-y, then whammy! Get some tickets to Miami! Snow is easing, but we're still freezing. It may be spring by the astronomer, but not by the thermometer. Mighty fine, then leonine."
Sunday, Mar 21
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Currently: 73˚F
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6:35
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Wishing you and your family a Happy Easter today!!!!
Patricia
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Good luck and most of all, have fun with it!
Happy Easter and Spring to all.
-Kim
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Satellite and internet, huh? I’m going to go tell DH we need that, he’s already saying the chickens are going to live better than we do. It will be fun to see if that pushes him over the edge. :wall:
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My mom always tells the story of when my grandmother thought she’d get an early start on her chickens and ordered them too soon and it got cold so she had them all in her house and one day when they got back from church the little darlings had figured out how to flap their wings and get out of their boxes – need I say more :rotfl:
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This is so fun to watch! Now it’s not just a farmhouse…it’s a FARM. And fresh eggs…yum.
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Whose chore will it be to clean the hen house?
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I echo the comment about skunks, possums and in this county, weasels, minks and fox. All can and will get into your henhouse so be sure everything is as tight as you can get it. A black snake living in the coop is not a bad idea–they keep the vermin population down. Might eat an egg a month, but worth the price.
I just moved my chicks from the house to the coop this weekend. They were inside for 6 weeks, first under a heat lamp and gradually tapered off to get used to normal temps. Keep their water and food as clean as you can to prevenet disease. You can get a water warmer worth its weight in winter. Lights on laying hens keep them laying–they need 14 hours of light a day to lay. I like to have a mixture of hens. This year it’s leghorns because even though the eggs are white they lay year-round, RI Reds because they’re calm and dependable, Araucanas for colored eggs, Buff Orpingtons and Wyandottes because of their pretty color. I wanted Domineckers (pretty!) and Golden Comets (brown eggs year-round)but the feed store didn’t have them.
Don’t change their feed brand if you can help it; they don’t like that.
Boy, 30+ years of raising chickens has taught me things I didn’t know I knew! See photos of my babies on my blog. They’re cute!
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I thought I had died and gone to cookie heaven.
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BW
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~A
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As some folks commented, having the coop in a place you can watch is the best way to enjoy your hens ~ and keep them safe. I am looking forward to reading about your chicken adventures!
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