Early Chicken Coop Days, Fall 2004
When we bought our property in the late ’90′s, it was sadly run down, but with a few treasures such as an old child’s playhouse close to our garage. Once we were acclimated, we turned our attention to the potential of gardens, shaped trees, and desirable landscape. Soon after that we dragged the extremely heavy child’s playhouse, long abandoned, down to a quiet southwest corner of our property. We saw the potential for modifying this “cutie pie” house into a perfect country coop for our soon-to-be-arriving hens.
We first set out to secure our chicken coop in its new location. Following that, we throughly cleaned it, removed any sharp points, rain proofed it, and repaired wood boards. We next modified the windows with a strong secure wire screen, so no varmits could make their way through a window, and then created shutters to close and secure the chickens in at night. Doors, windows, and shutters should open from the outside, so as not to take up valuable space inside your chicken coop. We made a front door that opened and closed, and made a backdoor which opened and closed to the adjoining enclosed outside pen. A clever addition was a smaller door, within the back door which could be used for winter time or at times when weather is extreme. We painted the trim of the chicken coop and its front porch, and made hen nesting boxes on one side of the coop, and mounted a night roosting bar on the opposite side. Our front door and outside back door had locking capabilities.
If you have an existing building on your property or in your yard, it might be worthy of repurposing for chickens. Chickens are very forgiving, and I have heard of all sorts of housing or “recooping” from using abandoned cars, to run down avairies, to abandoned storage sheds. As I mentioned before, there are basics to keeping chickens, and the easier to clean a chicken coop, the easier it is going to be on you and your hens. It is key that you provide good ventilation without a draft for your hens. It is also important that your chicken coop be dry, and not damp and humid. Chickens respond well to sunlight for egg-laying and overall health so position your coop and outside pen accordingly, but don’t forget to provide some shade too, either with a shade cloth or landscaping.
Chickens do best with feed and fresh water at all times. I hang a source of water in the outside pen, and a provide a smaller source of water inside the chicken coop floor, placed on two bricks. The feed bucket I take out to the adjoining outside pen in the morning, and return it in the evening inside the chicken coop, unless it is going to rain or storm. Please note, keep feed dry at all times. Wet feed can become moldy, rancid, and attract bugs. Chickens should not be feed wet or moldy feed. Feed stores have feeders and waters for reasonable prices. Hanging the feeders and waters is a good idea, and keeps the feed and water clean and prevents spillage. Feeders and waters should be hung by a chain at about the height of a hen’s back.
Here in Southern California, temperatures rarely drop to freezing. Therefore we don’t need to heat our chicken coop. Also, with the chicken coop closed up tightly at night, the hen’s bodies huddled together at night on their roosting bar, also helps to keep them warm. In other parts of the country, you might have to provide heat in your chicken coop, and that would also be a factor where you locate your chicken coop.
Hens naturally need 8 hours of daylight to lay continuously. When daylight decreases, hens slowly stop laying, drop their feathers, and take a break from egg-laying, called molting. This process can take several weeks, do not be alarmed. Eventually, hens grow in beautiful new feathers, and begin to start laying eggs again. If you wish to have eggs year round from your flock, you must provide a light source to supplement the daylight length, such as a 40 watt bulb above their feeding and watering area. I prefer to let my hens follow their natural cycle, and not supplement with additional light as the day length decreases. If you require light, this too would be a factor in where you locate your chicken coop for electricity.
The size of your flock is going to be determined by your available square footage for your chicken coop, and hopefully adjoining outside pen. You cannot determine you want 12 hens, when you have proper square footage for only 5 hens. Hens will naturally form a “pecking order”, and with over crowding it can lead to cannibalism, broken eggs, disease, etc.
There are a lot of points to consider when creating your chicken coop, but most of it is common sense and good management.













{ 16 comments… read them below or add one }
Hi,
My husband just built a Chicken Coop, but there is no floor in it. Is that ok? We have bedding/pellets on the ground. We live in the Northwest and get alot of rain. I was wondering how good it was for the chickens to not have flooring.
Thanks
Kathy, actually this is not good for several reasons. It is always best to elevate your chicken coop floor off of the ground for air circulation and ventilation. It will be hard to control rats, mice, gophers, etc. It will be hard to keep clean. Chickens do not do well with wet and dampness. If possible I would try and elevate your coop, and put in an untreated plywood floor, then place your bedding on top of your floor. Thanks for your great comment….VintageGardenGal
I am confused about the necessity of feeding hens “chicken feed”.
I have read bloggers comments saying in the “olden days”they were fed
kitchen scraps and otherwise subsisted on the insects etc. in the yard.
Of course this assumes one has sufficient space to let them “free range:.
Colleen, hens have to eat just about all the time, except when they are sleeping, brooding, or laying an egg. That is why it is important to provide water and feed at all times. I actually give my hens a 50/50 combination of chicken scratch and laying mash. If I didn’t provide feed for them, it would make me uncomfortable that they might not be getting enough protein, etc. I give my hens treats every day in fresh lettuce, greens, left over corn on the cob, peaches, apples, etc. I also let them out almost every day, so they eat bugs and vegetation from our garden. What a great comment….VintageGardenGal
I am building my coop right now and am wondering several things:
*Does there need to be a window?
*I mismeasured one side and have a 2″ x 36″ open space on the side wall above where the roost is going to be. I was going to cover it with hardware cloth and view it as ventilation and light. Being in SF’s mild climate will this still be too drafty for the hens at night?
*I have two kids 2 & 4, would I benefit from getting chicks rather than pullets so that they will bond better (be gentler) with the kids?
Thanks for all the information.
Lisa
Lisa, it is really important that chickens are in a dry environment, and that they have adequate ventilation. Your 2″ x 36″ should work nicely protected, for ventilation. Chickens like windows, and like to look out from their coop. I think windows are nice to let sun and light into the coop, too. Are you planning on having an outside pen, too? They like to have space to be active.
I close up my hens every night, close their windows and doors, for protection, leaving a small space open for ventilation. I would do that in your area, too. Protect your chickens from wet, dampness, and drafts.
Chicks are wonderful, but you will have to give them a heat source till they grow larger, and start getting their feathers. Hens that I got at 2-3 months old bonded nicely with me, too.
Thanks for your great questions…VintageGardenGal
I came across your website when looking for information about roosting bars, and have really enjoyed reading this information. I got 6 ex-battery hens just over two weeks ago and am learning as much as I can. They are such fascinating birds – I can stand and watch them all day.
My husband is American and we now live in England in a small sea-side town, which at the moment is very wet, but my ‘girlies’ are out every day, digging up my garden and sitting in the mud in the raised bed, enjoying every moment! Hurray for Hens!
Sally, comments like yours is why I write VintageGardenGal! It sounds like you live in a wonderful part of the world, too. Yes, hens love their dirt and mud baths, not getting around it. Thanks for your wonderful comment…VintageGardenGal.
Hello – First of all, thanks for sharing your fabulous information about your chickens. We will begin turning an old playhouse into a chicken coop in the next month for our four beautiful chicks (who will soon be hens!!) Do you have any more specifics or pics of the ‘refashioning’ of the playhouse that we could use as a guide?
Thanks again, Jen.
Jen, the best thing is to go to my home page on http://www.vintagegardengal.com. On left side bar, go to “Chicken” category. I have written extensively many posts with photos on my nesting boxes, outside pen, roosting bar, manure box, chicken coop decor, etc. Thanks for your kind words…VintageGardenGal
Hi,
I love your website and your chicken coop, it’s adorable. I just received a chicken coop from Green Chicken Coops with a 9 foot run and 3 nesting boxes. I have six chickens, I just picked them up a few days ago, they are about eight weeks old. They stay in the coop all the time and only one or two will venture outside the coop. I have been putting on a heat lamp for them every night since the temps have dropped into the 40′s. I have a question about cleaning, I have a slatted floor in my coop which drops to the ground under the coop which is screened in as a shaded area under the coop for the chickens. Should I putting shavings down there also? I am having a hard time keeping any bedding on the floor of the coop because it falls through. Also, will they eventually wander out into the run as they get older?
Thank you for any info you can provide.
Kisrten, I went on Green Chicken Coops website, as I was not familiar with them yet. They have nice coops. Perhaps you might contact them, and ask them more details about their design, to help you raise your chickens. Personally, I like a solid coop floor, because it is easier for me to clean, and scoop the bedding and manure into my compost. I don’t think you need bedding under the coop, if it is grass or soil. I guess the golden rule is, “whatever works best for you, and is healthy for your chickens”. Your hens are young, and are unfamiliar with their new environment. Yes, they will begin to venture outside, and feel more comfortable. Welcome to the joy of chickens…VintageGardenGal
Hi Bonnie,
I just LOVE your site – it is so full of such wonderful information! My family and I are raising our very first backyard flock of six Ameraucana chicks. They are almost old enough to go into their coop. I have a question for you. What type of waterer do you recommend? I have read that most folks hang feeders off of the coop floor – do you do that with the watering system too? Can I just give them a crock of water, or do I need to buy the type that they sell at the local feed store? Will they drink from a bowl, or is there danger in an open bowl of water? Thanks so much in advance for your response!
Fancy
Fancy, I do suggest a “poultry waterer” from your local feed store. If you hang your waterer shoulder height to your hens, your water will stay cleaner. Chickens can knock the bowl over, poop in it. A waterer keeps out dust, feathers, etc. out of your waterer. Chickens need a clean water source at all times. Thanks for your kind comment…VintageGardenGal
Our 18 chickens are now 8 weeks old, they have a nice house with roosts and access to a huge area of grass which is fenced with an electrified poultry fence. The trouble is they want to stay indoors most of the time! Should I make them stay outside by shutting the door to their house or just let them take their time?
Pat, I suggest you let them find their way outside. I always put my chicken feeder in the outside pen (unless it is bad weather), and provide a waterer in their outside pen, too. At night I bring their feeder inside, so as not to tempt mice and rodents. If you have their feed and water outside, maybe they will venture out. Maybe you have it outside already. Thanks for your great comment…VintageGardenGal