Chicken House Plans - Things To Consider

Chicken House Plans - Things To Consider

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You want to make your hen house a place where they can grow healthy an happy.

There are specific concerns in building your hen house to satisfy both you and your chickens.

The Design of the chicken coop

The coop must be secured from any kind of predator. Every single aspect in the pen must be structured to brave the wrath and longing of predators that are always on the lookout for a free meal.

When selecting a wire mesh, be sure it is the right one. Predators come in many forms. They forage within the area of your coop unnoticed just waiting for the time when they can attack. You have to make sure that the coop is impassable because some predators like raccoons just reach out for their prey, easily.

Securing the Coop

In ally with the first requirement, this is a continuation. Aside from predators, you have to secure the coop from those awful rats. They burrow through the ground and come up from below. If the coop floor is not blocked, these rodents will slip into the hens quarters. Rodents are attracted to the food youre giving your chickens and the droppings they produce.

Whats more devastating is that these pesky rats love eggs. So whenever laying season comes, they gather too!

Prevention is better than cure. That is why preventing them in the first place is better then getting rid of them after they have already discovered your treasure. All you need to do is construct a floor within the pen. You can also bury a fence about 12 inches deep around the hens house. Be sure that the materials you will use for the fence and the floor is thick or hard enough for them to impossibly bite through.

Weather Proof

The way you build your coop must not be drafty or breezy. Subsequently, seasons will change and so will the weather. That is why your coop must be able to endure any kind of natural effects.

Nesting Boxes

Roosting poles must be provided for your hens to nap. It must have approximate 2-inch wide rounded edges. You allot an 8 to 10 inch space between every bird. Put nest boxes to encourage egg laying. One nest box is equivalent to three to four chickens. Position the boxes inches above the ground. Do not let it touch the soil. Place these nesting boxes somewhere concealed where no one can bother them while theyre doing their thing. Safety is the very first policy one should follow.

3 Square Feet per Bird

Your coop must be spacious. You have to allocate at least 3 square feet for every bird. There should also be space where the feeder and the water can hang to which is 7-8 inches above the ground.

Easy Accessibility

The coop must be reachable for the owners sake ONLY. Predators and rodents not allowed! Easy accessibility can help you clean the coop so that bacteria and bugs do not gather.


About the Author:
Julie Corral is a chicken enthusiast who spreads her insider guides online at http://www.easychickenhouseplans.com



Article Originally Published On: http://www.articlesnatch.com


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