Chickens & Chicken Coop FAQ

by Bonnie Manion on April 28, 2009

Kathy Lafleur's Amazing Chicken Coop

Kathy Lafleur's Amazing Chicken Coop


My dear friend, fellow gardener, and incredible ceramic and mosaic artist, Kathy LaFleur, would only have a chicken coop as befitting as the one in the above photo for her lucky chickens.

Kathy has transformed this aviary into a “palais de poulet” for her hens. On the top of her roof she added roof tiles, and planted beautiful thriving blooming succulents. On the front of her chicken coop she has painstakingly created two unique mosaics. There are more colorful mosaics and mirrors adorning the inside. Notice the two rows of vintage hen nesting boxes in the chicken coop background, and that she uses hay as her preferred bedding material. Hats off to you, Kathy, your creative chicken coop is so inspiring and amazing!

Here are a few FAQ questions from the previous “Backyard Chicken Coop” Series:

What are the best chicken breeds for a backyard chicken coop? It really is your preference, and what your purpose is for having chickens.

My preference for backyard “homesteaders” is the heavy-breed chickens that generally lay brown eggs. Some of my favorites are the Buff Orpingtons, Rhode Island Reds, Barred Rocks, Silver-Laced Wyndottes, and the Black Australorps. The heavy-breed chickens are more docile, friendly, approachable, and are great layers. Ameraucanas lay a pretty blue-green egg, and are a nice choice, too.

If you are pinched for space overall, you might consider the Bantam chicken varieties. They are a smaller chicken that lay large eggs relative to their size. Their space requirements are 1 sq ft/bird inside coop and 4 sq ft/bird outside chicken coop, quite a bit less than the heavy breed chickens at 1.5-2 sq ft/bird inside chicken coop, and 8-10 sq ft/bird for outside pen. Silkies, with their head plumes, and Cochins with their heavily feathered legs are Bantams. I call them designer chickens, pretty and showy, but can be skittish and a bit aloof. You might want to get an assortment of breeds for your backyard flock for variety and fun, but preferably all about the same age.

What is the best floor for chicken coops? Chickens require dry, draft free housing with good ventilation. Ideally you want your chicken coop, raised off of the ground, with sunlight able to access underneath. However, this is not always possible, especially if you have a modified structure or building.

A concrete floor is acceptable, but you must provide ample bedding and make sure it is not damp. A dry, wood floor is acceptable, again with ample bedding. If you are using plywood or wood in general, make sure it is untreated, no chemicals used in manufacturing it. My preference for bedding is pine litter, available at feed stores, because it is manageable and easy to compost with. Hay is another nice choice of bedding. Sometimes your chicken coop design lends itself better to one kind of bedding over another.

An entire wire floor is not ideal, because it can be hard on hen’s legs and feet, and manure is dropping where? Wire mesh over the top of your chicken manure box is fine, but not for an entire floor. It also leaves your hen house rather exposed to rodents and varmints.

Where do I position my chicken coop in my backyard? Ideally, you want a quiet corner or spot on your property that is away from your house. It needs to be preferably on a high, well-drained area. You want ample air movement without a draft. Fresh air means fresh oxygen and movement to remove excess moisture, ammonia, and carbon dioxide which hens naturally give off.

It should be an area where the south sun reaches the chicken coop, and the outside pen for a large portion of the day. We have our chicken coop nestled by our orchard, and generally close to our storage shed, and composting area. It is an area slightly removed, but accessible. Fun with landscaping helps muffle sounds from your chickens, and integrates your chicken coop with the rest of your garden.

Chickens are active, and can be remain in their outside pen all day. Remember, if they are laying hens, they will need access to their chicken coop and nesting boxes during the daytime, too. At night time, it is best to tuck your chickens in, by bringing their feed bucket inside the chicken coop, and closing up their outside pen, doors, and windows till morning. Make sure your chickens have adequate ventilation with their chicken coop closed for the night.

When I let my chickens out in my yard, they like to wallow in the dirt. What are they doing? I call it a “dirt bath”. They enjoy creating a little basin and laying down in the dirt, flinging dirt over themselves and their feathers. It is a way of cleaning themselves, cooling themselves, and relaxing.

I have a hen who insists on sitting on a “clutch” of eggs for long periods of time. What is she doing? She is brooding, or sitting on her eggs to hatch them. If you have a rooster in your flock, most likely you want fertilized eggs and/or chicks. If your hens sit on fertilized eggs for 21 days, embryos will develop and eventually hatch as chicks.

Even if you don’t have a rooster in your flock, some hens will naturally sit or “brood” on their eggs, usually in the spring time. You have a choice to let your hen brood, or collect your eggs as usual. I usually collect my eggs so I know they have recently been laid, and because a hen can actually become emaciated by not moving, eating, or following her regular routine for days and sometimes weeks. Just because you remove all the eggs a hen is sitting on, does not necessarily mean she will stop brooding, too.

I have a neighbor or friend who wants to give me one of her hens that is being picked on in her own flock. Is that okay to do? I have generally had good experience in adopting hens into my flock. I would encourage you to adopt a hen, if the circumstance is right for you, and the hen is generally healthy and in good condition. There is a difference in a hen being pecked at, and a hen that is sick. Introducing an older hen into a younger hen flock usually works well. The adopted hen, can become the “mother hen”, and show the others “the ropes”.

Why are certain hens being picked on in my flock, and how can I prevent it, stop it? Hens naturally have a pecking order they establish within a flock. Sometimes a hen is perceived as weak, or picked on for no reason at all. If you introduce younger hens into your flock this can be a problem because they are smaller and younger, and unable to defend themselves. Generally speaking, if your flock of hens are the same age, you will have less of a “pecking order” problem. This can be hard as your flock size shifts and you might want to add new hens. Hens like routine, and when new hens are frequently introduced, it shifts the flock dynamics. Also, make sure you are not overcrowding your hens, check your sq ft/bird to chicken coop and sq ft/bird to outdoor pen ratio.

Sometimes it takes just a few days for all of the hens to settle in, and adjust. Sometimes they never adjust, and you might have to separate them in another pen or coop, or isolate them for a period of time, or ask a friend about adopting your hen.

Do you have more questions, comments, stories to share about your chickens and chicken coop?

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{ 29 comments… read them below or add one }

zoran ristic July 20, 2009 at 4:28 am

should we put food or water in the chicken coop when the chickens are locked in at night?

Bonnie Manion July 20, 2009 at 9:08 pm

Zoran, I always put my chicken feed inside for the night, just to protect it from rodents. I take it out in the morning, and put it in the outside pen, unless it is raining. I always have water available for my hens inside their chicken coop, and in their outside pen. I always provide fresh water and laying mash for my hens at all times.

Thanks for your comment….VintageGardenGal

Lorie B August 3, 2009 at 5:08 pm

Dear VGG,
I am new to having chickens and have been raising (4) Bantam hopefully hens for 5 weeks now. They have been very pampered inside and I am ready to introduce them to their outdoor coop.
I have agonized about my set up for quite sometime now and need help. They are my buddies now and I want to make sure they are safe, I can regulate temps at night and winter, and start with a smart setup for cleaning. I live in Minnesota, and need to prepare for winter.
My coop 6′w x 4′d x 6′h w/4 small hardware cloth windows w/shutters and a door (a cheaply built miniture play house). It sits inside a 10′w x 10′d x 6′h chain link dog kennel (not yet covered) that can open to my garden with only a 3′ h barrier.
The coop is has fairly thin cedar walls (no insulation), and lined on the exterior w/chicken wire and the floor 1″ hardware cloth sitting on dirt.
My biggist dilemma is the floor and cleaning. Should I elevate it?, put it on plywood on the ground, just fill it with pine shavings ???? PS We have 2 1/2 acres and are not zoned to have chickens, so I am trying to be low key. Sorry so wordy.
Kind Regards,
Lorie B

Bonnie Manion August 4, 2009 at 11:16 am

Lorie,
I lived in Edina, MN for three years in my childhood, so know a little bit about the winters in Minnesota. However, I have never raised chickens in your climate, so I can just give you general guidelines. I would imagine your local feed store, would be a good regional resource for advice, too.

It sounds like you are on the right track with your chicken coop and dimensions, protection wire, etc. Good for you. In general, chickens can take a dry cold better than the heat, but never extreme temperatures. It sounds like you will have to provide a safe heat source for them in the winter, and you’re planning for that which is good.

Yes, I would encourage you to raise your chicken coop off of the ground, year-round. Like 8-12″ or so, or more with the kind of snow drifts you might experience. You want air ventilation and air circulation under and around your coop. I would install a non-treated plywood floor as your chicken coop floor, and use pine shavings or straw as bedding. If your chicken coop floor gets wet from snow, etc, remove your bantams, don’t expose them to a damp, wet floor. If you do not have a dry, sealed, protected floor, it will be hard to heat your chicken coop, adequately and efficiently. Also, mice and rodents will try and get in the coop from the floor, looking for feed.

For wintertime, I would try and insulate your chicken coop as much as possible, use a safe heat source, allow for a small amount of fresh air–for ventilation, and try and keep your coop as clean as possible. If you have a blizzard or a really bad winter, could you bring your bantams in the garage or something? Watch your flock closely in the winter for extreme huddling together, pale combs, and listlessness…they might be telling you that are cold.

Best of luck to you with your bantams…..thanks for your great comment….VintageGardenGal.

simone September 13, 2009 at 8:19 am

cool chicken coop

Bonnie Manion September 14, 2009 at 7:06 am

Simone, thanks for your kind words, I’ll pass your comment on to my friend, Kathy…VintageGardenGal

Hilda Saunders November 19, 2009 at 4:15 pm

Hi Bonnie,first of all i want to thank you for all the help you gave me when setting up for my hens.you’ve been a wonderful help. I have 8 chickens, had them for 3 months now. when i went to the coop yesterday afternoon i noticed that one chicken was bleeding back by her tailfeathers.she was being pecked by several of the hens.since it was almost dark i left her for the night,more of the same today so i separated her from the rest,i’am hopeing that if she heals a bit they will leave her alone, seems like if they see blood ,they keep on pecking.someone told me i should trim their beaks so they can’t hurt each other. if their beaks do have to be trimmed, how do you do this?

Bonnie Manion November 19, 2009 at 6:01 pm

Hilda, I wouldn’t do anything to your chickens’ beaks. I just think it is too cruel. Chickens can still do quite a bit of damage to one another even without a sharp beak.

I suggest you separate your hen, like you have, keep her wound clean, and maybe put a bit of vaseline or antibotic ointment on her wound. Let her heal. If you know who the troublemaker is, isolate that chicken. I have even used a squirt bottle to squirt a hen that is aggressive and picking on another.They don’t like to get squirted, and it doesn’t hurt them.

Also, observe your chickens, are they aggressive over the feed. It might help to have 2 feed sources, so there is no competition over food. This has worked for me.

These are some suggestions. I think your chickens have been together from the start, correct. Usually they get along if they have grown up together. Thanks for your great question….VintageGardenGal

Hilda Saunders November 20, 2009 at 8:13 am

thanks for the help bonnie. i had already treated her wound and seperated her, going to keep her there for several days then try again.they were raised together and until now have seen no fighting.just scared me a little, the one being picked on is a gentle soul and dosen’t even fight back.think i’ll get her boxing gloves for christmas lol.i hav a big feeder so thats not a problem and they hav lots of space. i used all your info befor i started the coop.your site has been wonderful. again i would like to thank you for helping people like me, and free of cost! you are a wonderful person.

Jonathan November 23, 2009 at 8:23 pm

I live in Durham, NC and have 7 chickens. 2 Rhode Island Reds, 2 Cochin Giants, 2 Plymouth Rocks (older and layers-the others are less than 2 months) and one cute little Silky. I was very organized and I had my feed for the older layers and the younger ones together in a sealed tight garbage can in separate bags. The other day, I forgot to cover them for a few hours and it rained like mad. Everything got wet and mixed together. I had about 40 lbs of feed. Do I need to toss it all? Right now it is all spread on a sheet in my house drying out. Is this a waste? Thanks

Bonnie Manion November 23, 2009 at 9:54 pm

Jonathan, sounds like you have a very nice flock. Once feed gets wet, it usually is not recoverable. It could start to smell, mold, and get rancid. Forty pounds of feed, is not that expensive to replace. If your chickens are dear to you, it is not worth trying to save that feed. That’s my opinion. Thanks for your great question….VintageGardenGal

Jonathan November 24, 2009 at 8:15 pm

Thanks, Bonnie. I tried to lay it flat and saved some of it, but much of it is starting to smell. Oh, well. I’ll remember to put the top back on next time. You have to love the chickens. They’re great pets, if not the smartest animals. However, I did teach the Plymouth Rocks to jump when I used mealworms as a treat. Impressive strength when they really want something.

Bonnie Manion November 24, 2009 at 10:06 pm

Jonathan, you should see our hens jump for the ripe grape clusters on the grapevines, just like going for the meal worms. Thanks for your great comment…VintageGardenGal

Kristi Rada January 25, 2010 at 4:27 pm

Dear VGG –

We are in the beginning stages of planning our chicken palace. My question is concerning bedding. I have an abundant supply of pine straw/needles on my property. Would this work for the coop?

Thanks for the great info!

Bonnie Manion January 26, 2010 at 8:26 am

Kristi, I’m not quite sure what pine/straw needles is? Is it straw? You can use straw as a bedding. I use clean, bundled pine shavings from a local feed store. It is convenient to clean, nice for my hens, and easy to compost with. You want a material that is the same. Also, you want something that is soft and easy on your hens’s feet and pads of their feet to avoid any injury. Pine needles take so long to break down in a compost situation, and also have a point, so I wouldn’t recommend pine needles. Good luck and thanks for your great question…VintageGardenGal

Janet Kelson March 1, 2010 at 3:28 am

Hi,
Since I live in a very rural area of the Southwest we have many coyote and hawks, just to name a few predators! We do have a very large unused dog run about 30′x15′. It is very sturdy chain link with a chain link roof. It also has many vines growing up the sides, in, and on top for summer shade. The potential problem is that the entire floor is concrete. If I cover the roof with tarps during an occasional rain storm, can I cover the concrete floor with dirt (our dirt is sandy desert dirt) and add a layer of wood chips? I would love to allow mine to be completely free range, but I can’t. I will, however, be able to put them in my back yard for a couple hours daily. I’m planning to have only 3 hens for pets and eggs, and I’ll build a well ventilated coop on the one end inside the run.
My question is, can a concrete floor on the run work? Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Janet

Bonnie Manion March 1, 2010 at 12:51 pm

Janet, sounds like your unused dog run is perfect for your hens. Here is a post I did on “outside pens” for more information, too, http://www.vintagegardengal.com/2009/04/01/backyard-chicken-coop-outside-pen/. I suggest you make something to frame your outside pen floor and chainlink, like a lip or something to keep your bedding in and not be all over your backyard. You will want to put down either nice sand, or hay, or some sort of cushion bedding, so your hens are not on concrete all of the time, and something that is easy to clean.
Thanks for your nice comment…VintageGardenGal

Janet Kelson March 2, 2010 at 2:33 am

Bonnie,
Thanks so much for directing me to your article about outside pens. Putting the lip aroung the chain link is such a great idea for holding sand and other top matereal! We’re off to Home Depot tomarrow! I’m such a newbie, these discussion groups are so informational!
Thanks again,
Janet

Bonnie Manion March 2, 2010 at 7:54 am

Janet, glad to help you…..VintageGardenGal

Doug April 6, 2010 at 11:43 pm

Question…
I have 3 chickens now. 2 orange/yellow ones and 1 speckled black one (sorry don’t know what kind they are, all brown layers) , We did have a total of 4 ( 1 of the black ones got killed) : (
Now the one black one is getting “bullied” by the 2 orange ones. They are a bit larger and very much more aggressive.
They seem to have pecked the back feathers off of the black one.
My pen is pretty small and not sure how I could separate them without building another pen.
What do you suggest?
Thank you

Bonnie Manion April 7, 2010 at 6:55 am

Doug, I would try and separate them somehow for a while, or you will probably lose your other black one. Chickens have a pecking order, and they can be pretty ruthless. Is there a big cardboard box, or something like that you can provide a temporary home. Maybe if you adopted another hen, or got one from the feed store, it might shake up the dynamics once again. Good luck…VintageGardenGal

Daemon Rowanchilde June 19, 2010 at 12:53 pm

Cedar wood and Chickens

Hi Bonnie
We just had external nest boxes built onto the coop and the fellow lined the edges of the boxes with cedar trim. Some people feel that cedar is harmful to chickens, especially nest boxes where the cedar is close to the chicken’s nose. How do you feel about this?

Bonnie Manion June 21, 2010 at 7:23 am

Daemon, there is a chance cedar wood is toxic to birds. I would consult with your vet, and research more on the internet, too. I personally would take it off.
Thanks for your great question….VintageGardenGal

Sue52 June 26, 2010 at 6:13 pm

Hello! I have seven chickens with a roomy coop and lots of space in their run. Last week, I noticed that it seems the neck feathers on my Araucana have either fallen out or been pecked out. Then tonight, I came home to find my White Leghorn bleeding from either her neck or her comb, it is hard to tell. Her beak has blood on it too, but it didn’t appear that there was blood on any of the others although it was getting dark and hard to tell. We do have a cranky RI Red who has the nerve to peck at me, and I suspect she maybe to blame, but I have not caught her hurting the others. This flock has been together for one year happily. We did introduce six more 3 month olds into the run but they do have their own coop. They all seemed to be minding their own business, and the little ones are not harmed. ?? Can I give first aid to the bleeding hen? What would that be? Any suggestions are welcome :-) ) We love our backyard hens, they have been wonderful.

Bonnie Manion June 27, 2010 at 7:47 am

Sue52, there is always a pecking order in a chicken flock. When hens of different ages are introduced into a flock sometimes it rocks the boat. Also, if there is a rooster in the mix. If your flock is stressed, sometimes that brings on pecking. Best to keep an eye on your flock, and separate hens that are being pecked on with a friendly companion for a time, so they have a buddy. Try putting vaseline or bacitracin ointment on your hen’s wounds. Another suggestion from your local feed store I like is, Vetericyn. It is a miracle spray for cleaning wounds, infections, hot spots. It cleans, treats, and heals, all in one spray. It is safe for chickens. It is a little pricey. Good luck..VintageGardenGal

Lainy June 30, 2010 at 8:45 am

We raised chickens for several years while living in Wisconsin. Last year we moved to Panama and have decided we miss having chickens in the yard. With steady warm temperatures year round, do chickens need more than a high roost that keeps them away from strong winds, rain and their predators (real or perceived) at night? In Wisconsin we closed the chickens in at night to keep them warm and to keep them safe from hawks and foxes. There’s no cold here, and the only predators on the island we live on would be a loose dog, but our yard is fenced in to keep them out, and our dogs (and chickens) in. Also, there are a couple options for placement of a chicken roost or coop. One over concrete, the other over dirt. This is a rain forest area and even in the dry seasons, molds can be a problem, so bedding will have to be kept to a minimum and easily accessible so it can be changed frequently. Any advice you can give is appreciated.

Bonnie Manion July 2, 2010 at 7:46 am

Lainy, are you speaking of a concrete chicken coop floor, versus a dirt floor? A concrete coop floor with lots of bedding placed on top might be easier to clean. For an outside pen floor, I would stay with the dirt. I am certainly not familiar with your environment, so go with your gut. Thanks for your great question…VintageGardenGal

Lainy July 19, 2010 at 8:56 am

We have two 2-week old, incubator hatched chicks. Today we acquired a hen with four chicks about that same age. How old do our incubator raised babies have to be before they have a strong enough immune system to be safely put with the others?

Bonnie Manion July 20, 2010 at 7:01 am

Lainy, I’m going to refer you to http://www.mcmurrayhatchery.com/index.html, for that question. Please check with them. Thanks for your great question…VintageGardenGal

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