I haven't posted on here in some time and it's probably because I am not at my home and had no projects in the hopper, so little to report. Now I have a project coming up that I'm excited about, so I can write it all down and post pics as I go along.
Writing down what I've done, will do, how it went...that all gives me clarity and helps me work out the bugs of a proposed project more than working on the actual thing all day. I don't know if it is like that for you all.
This project will be included in my book, so I'm going to take pics of every step, of the materials used and the cost of the materials with an eye towards using cheap, existing or easily procured materials to build a small(8X8, or possibly 12X8) chicken coop. The same design could be incorporated into a larger coop but the smaller is all I need right now.
I'm going to build initially for brooding 40-50 broiler chicks and using the coop as a movable shelter so as to free range them to processing size. They will not be confined to the coop but it will keep their feed dry and provide shade
Then the coop will be changed into a layer coop by the addition of hay bales and roosts. If a person didn't want to convert it to a layer coop, the whole thing could be converted to a greenhouse or deconstructed quite easily and stored flat against a storage building or shed.
I feel it is important to show folks how they can have chickens and provide a sturdy, working shelter for them without a big outlay of money or effort. This will be easily constructed by one person but goes faster if you have two. It is just as easily deconstructed as the only thing holding the cattle panel hoops, the wire endcaps and the tarping on the frame will be some zip ties, steeples and an old worn out cargo net.
I used a similar shelter for my sheep last year and it was incredibly sturdy, didn't do more than shiver in the high wind, shed rain and snow easily and looked as good when I took it down as it did when I put it up. It took about an hour to put up and less than that to take it down.
Cattle panels are my favorite building material now and I place them right up there with duck tape in their versatility and durability on a homestead.
I plan to advertise a workshop when it comes time to process the chickens and I'm going to show them how to do it on the cheap, without all the fancy killing stations that folks are investing in. Killing cones of bleach jugs, kitchen knives and pruners, turkey fryer for a scalding pot or maybe even rig up a dry plucker out of a hand drill(haven't made up my mind about all that).
Anyone else doing meaties this year?