Monday, September 22, 2014

Chicken Coop Build Part 2 - The Build Begins

It was a freezing cold day in November because we're crazy people and can't start projects in the spring like normal people. I had finally caved in to The Husband and agreed to get chickens and I think he was impatient and/or afraid that I might change my mind...

Since it was snowing off and on, we started building in the garage.



What would become the platform for the main coop.


Then it was time to move it out to the yard.

Heave!

With a little help from our friends...



Its a good thing they love us even when we're crazy
and it's 15 degrees out...

And it has arrived!
Once we had the floor platform done, it was time to frame the walls.

It was unseasonably warm at ~50 degrees

Good opportunity to learn some carpentry skills.

We're equal opportunity around here...



Time to move!







Ok, we have wall frames, now what?

It's an old fashioned barn (coop) raising!



When you're The Daughter, any time is the right time for a song!

Being very good wall frame holder-uppers...

The kids 'helping'...

Fasten the walls down.




Adding the framing for the attached run.

Run framing done. Roof framing going up.

Its starting to resemble something...

The weather couldn't hold off forever, and the roof needed to go on.

Preparing for roofing. You can't tell from the photo,
but the wind was CRAZY this day.

It wasn't actually warm that day, he's just crazy...

Time for siding!


Starting cutting the siding.

Getting there...


And you thought you'd never use geometry and trigonometry again!


Cut outs for the nest box and windows.

Siding up!

The run all wired in.

All that was left was clean-up!

 In the next installment, the bells and whistles!





Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Chicken Coop Build Part 1 - The Design

Once the decision was made to start keeping chickens, one of the first things that we had to tackle was the coop. We started looking around online, at our local feed store, and pet stores. One of the very first things we had to decide was size. This goes back to the Know Your Codes post. Most cities, and many counties, have regulations regarding the minimum coop space per chicken. In Salt Lake City, you need 2 square feet per chicken if they will be allowed outside during the day, and 6 square feet per chicken if they won't. To start off we planned to have 8 chickens, and they would be allowed outside, so we needed a minimum of 16 square feet. However, I know how The Husband gets with animals, so I pushed to have enough square footage to be able to have the maximum 15 chickens allowed by the city because I had a sneaking suspicion that we would get there eventually. At the maximum 15 chickens, we were going to need a minimum of 30 square feet. 

Adorable and available at most feed stores, but WAY too small...


Typically, you have four options when obtaining a chicken coop: buy one new from a store or online, buy one used (usually in your local classifieds or Craigslist), build one, or have someone build one for you. We couldn't find a chicken coop big enough for our eventual 15 chickens in any stores or online. Most of them would fit no more than 3-4 chickens by the city's standard, though we did find one that would have fit 8. We also couldn't find anything used that was big enough but not way too big - like a shed that we could convert, for example.

That left either building a coop, or having one built for us. Well, if we're anything, we're DIY'ers, so build one, it was.

From that point, I asked The Husband for input. He said something along the lines of, "Design what you want and we'll make it happen. No chandeliers though." Party pooper.

So I started looking for inspiration online and collecting things on Pinterest. To see the whole thing, look at my Fancy Chicken Coops board here. The main inspirations for me came down to these three (one of which is based off another one):

Chez Poulet by Heather Bullard at heatherbullard.com

Gorgeous coop from The Art of Doing Stuff based loosely on Chez Poulet


Titled 'My Mid Life Crisis Coop' and found at http://www.backyardchickens.com/a/my-mid-life-crisis-coop

Gorgeous coops one and all! I wanted something like these that integrated a fully enclosed coop with attached fully enclosed run. Given that we needed at least 30 square feet of coop space, we decided to make our lives easy and do everything in 4 ft x 8 ft sections (32 square feet). So, I drew it up on the whiteboard in our kitchen and on graph paper. I apparently didn't take any pictures of that part though. :(

In the end, the enclosure was designed to be 8 ft x 8 ft total. Half of that would have the coop which would be elevated 2 feet off the ground to allow the chickens more room to roam around outside. We opted for external nest boxes and access doors on both ends. We started looking in our local classifieds for some materials that we hoped to get for cheaper than retail thanks to other people's remodeling leftovers. We wound up getting all of our roofing shingles for free (!) because someone was cleaning out her 80-year-old mother's basement and those were left overs from two roofs ago...We also got the majority of our hardware from our local Habitat for Humanity ReStore. The remainder of the materials we picked up at Home Depot with the use of our endlessly patient friend's van.

Roofing shingles from the '70s! They were still perfectly good though.


Piles and piles of plywood, siding, 2x4's, 4x4's, and 1x2's.

 In the next installment, the the build begins...