Reviews by Stephine

Romadfoxs Chicken Coop

romadfox
9 min read
4.81 star(s) 26 ratings
Views
120,794
Reaction score
27
Comments
54
Reviews
20
Very cute, original coop. With all those spaces in the walls (easy to see on the i side pictures) though I am afraid it is rather drafty. I would definitely put some plywood to cover the inside walls. Also, if the window stays open for ventilation (which it should) you want to use hardware cloth, not chicken wire (same for the run). Chicken wire keeps chickens in, but doesn’t keep predators out - it is too weak. 1/2” hardware cloth is much more protective, secured with washers or between wood boards - those little racoons are strong and will pull staples right out of the wood. Oh and the cinderblock foundation is looking a bit precarious to me, but maybe that’s because we have earthquakes… A good wind gust, though, might knock the coop of its foundation… or a few critters tunneling under it.

Miracle's Box

luckymiracle
6 min read
4.29 star(s) 17 ratings
Views
33,164
Reaction score
8
Comments
3
Reviews
15
While this is interesting to read, it is an absolute crazy „solution“ to keeping a rooster. I understand that the zig zag holes allow for some air exchange, but when you take into account that you need a square foot size opening to the outside (with nothing more than hardware cloth impeding the air flow) per chicken to assure proper ventilation it becomes obvious that this box can’t possibly be a healthy environment for a chicken...

Keeping Your Chickens Cool In Summer

AnimalGeek23
Updated
2 min read
4.45 star(s) 31 ratings
Views
17,490
Reaction score
29
Comments
19
Reviews
26
I am using a converted 5 gallon igloo cooler with self-filling lubing cups from dine-a-chook in the summer. I freeze water in a large square stainless steel food container and pop that giant ice cube into the water. Having the self-filling cups is great for when the chickens are panting because they have a hard time working the nipple drinkers in that state.
Instead of spritzing the chickens I set up a very inexpensive misting system (thin tube with 7(?) mist emitters that conects to a garden hose bought for $12 on Amazon. I draped those over the top of the run so the fine mist sprays down into it but mostly evaporates before it touches the chickens or the ground. This helps a lot. On days that won’t be quite as hot I just soak the run the night before with a hose - by morning the bedding will be mostly dry but the earth underneath nice and damp and cool. I also spray water all around the coop and run in areas under the trees and under the coop etc. that stay shady through the day - this cools of the area a little bit as well. When it’s really awful (100+) I put frozen water bottles in the nest boxes and fill buckets, or lately large terracotta pots, with icecubes and place them in a shadey spot in the run where they can sit closeby and cool off a little bit.
I have reflective shadecloth draped over the top of the run and down the south side to cover all but the bottom 12 inches to give them better shade in their smallish run. The one time we had 116F I just emptied large bags of ice cubes in a large plastic pan and put some pavers in there for the chickens to stand on (my flick does not stand in the water ever) then tossed more ice on the ground. They all survived, thank God!
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