I think we will be getting chicks this weekend....
I have been mostly against this acquisition since I did not want to spend any/much money on the hutch and I did not have TIME to build anything anyway.
However, Chick Acquisition has been pushed hard by the wife and youngest kids. Last Friday we stopped at the local Community College which has a large fenced in garden area which includes two flocks of chickens. We talked with the lady that runs the garden area as well as looked around.
Both hutches were cheap with frames made of PVC. One was a hoop type of structure with metal roofing. The ends were open to the wind. The lady said the more you baby the chickens the more you have to baby the chickens. She feeds them morning and evening and makes sure they have plenty of water not ice. I was surprised at how open the coops were. The birds were out of the rain, it was raining/misting when we visited, so they did not get wet unless they wanted too but they were pretty exposed to the temperature. They had PLENTY of ventilation.
They looked just fine.
I found a hutch design over the weekend that uses 16'x4' cattle panels bent to form a U which rests on 2x4s. The design I saw was about 8'x8' and then covered with a tarp. I am going to build something similar because it is cheap, fast to build, and I can reuse everything if the chickens go away for any number of possible reasons.
The next link is not the design I found but pretty danged close. In the text he mentions if he was going to rebuild he would use cattle panels. He also had some other interesting ideas. I posted the link because the guy is in VT and the coop is pretty basic but works for him. I like the snow insulation. :laughing: You can see how much or how little ventilation he has on his hutches. He mentions using insulation but I would think the snow is holding in more heat than the human made insulation he used.
Chicken Hoop House | Sugar Mountain Farm
Later,
Dan