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Build a Chicken Coop - Mistakes to Avoid When Building a Chicken Coop

25 16:42:02

In everything that you do, if you want to do it right, there should be plans. This would make things easier to execute. When you have already sketched your plans, you would also be able to manage your time well.

Plans for a chicken coop should be made precisely to give the best home to the best chickens in your area. The better the quality of your chickens are, the more chances you have of making it big in the poultry industry.

 

First, avoid making chicken coops which are too small for the number of chickens that you will house. Count all the number of chickens that you will raise as a start of your poultry farm. Take into consideration that it is advisable for each chicken to occupy 4 sq. ft to give them enough room to move around. A cramped up room for chickens might not let them grow to the best potential that they could have. If you are aiming to raise healthy chickens, then you have to obey this tip.

Second, do not forget to provide access points to your chicken coop. Some builders and owners only have in their minds that chicken coops are built to keep the fowls in, and this is exactly the reason why some coops are built without access to it for easy cleaning, feeding, watering, and harvesting of the eggs.

Third, do not just put up your chicken coop anywhere. The location of the coop should not depend entirely on your whims, wherever you like it. There are many things to consider before you should come up with the final decision of the coop's location. To avoid water problems, situate the coop in an elevated area to provide natural drainage for water. For the coop not to easily get wet, the roof should be built with a visible elevation too for water not to get deposited inside it and for water to flow directly onto the ground. For the coop's interior to easily dry up in case it gets wet, the floors should be slanting. A wet-proof coop will help contribute to maintaining healthy chickens. If they stay dry, they will not easily get sick.

Fourth, do not totally enclose the chicken without providing them proper ventilation. The coop's windows should face right so as to scoop out cold air during warm weather and to keep away cold breeze during cold weather.

Last, do not forget to install protection around the coop. You should keep predators out. It is of no use if other chicken-preying predators will be the ones to benefit from your chickens. Make sure that aside from providing the coop itself with durable walls, there should also be barb wires which will be buried 12 inches into the ground to ensure that they will not be lifted off easily, and 4 feet high above the ground just enough to keep predators away.