Chicken Tractor for Tractors

   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #11  
We used to let the girls run free.Then they started running up by the treeline and we lost a couple. Guessing coyotes. We have the occasional bobcat, so take your pick. They used to sleep in their fenced area , but up in a cedar tree. Then we lost two about a week apart out of the dang tree. By an owl we figure they could grab and swoop outside the pen with them. Full sized girls. So their run has a layer of chicken wire over it. This time of year as their pen is all mucked up, the misses and her grandson made a basic PVC tractor that we let them transfer out of the pen and just drag them out and back to fresh pasture. I've seen trailer styles with a run built in. One thing that looked neat to me I saved a pic from, but I can't name the source so maybe someone can fill in the blank. It is a run that you could butt up against the trailer for extra foraging area. backyard-chicken-coop-tractor.jpg
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors
  • Thread Starter
#12  
So, why not just use pallet forks? Rig the coop up to accept the forks, insert, lift, move and be done. Or rig it up to use the 3 point lif on the back of the tractor. No wheels involved in either.

You’re saying lift the whole coop on pallet forks? It’s about 14ft long, 6ft wide, and 7ft tall. Weighs maybe 600lbs. Trying to envision how that’d work.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #13  
Can't you lift it from the side?

Or go back to the trailer idea. Instead of trying to raise and lower the whole thing, make hinged flaps for all four sides that can be swung or slid up to move, then back down when stationary.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Can’t lift it from the side because the floor is open and nothing for pallet forks to lift up against.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #15  
Put the coop on skids and drag it
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #16  
The problem with the trailer idea is that we can’t let the chickens free range like in the picture above because they get eaten by every predator around. With the chicken tractor, the bottom is open, and the hens get a 6’ x 10’ patch of grass to scratch and peck. Every few days we move it to a new patch, the chickens get fresh grass, and the grass gets to recover. We like it so much more than our other stationary coop because it doesn’t require much cleaning at all.

The new tractor will most likely be an L3560 and I’ll weld a receiver hitch to the bucket so I can use the ball hitch to move the chicken tractor. Once hooked in, it’s very easy to move around, just like a trailer.

I figured since I’m going to get rear remotes and a third function on the loader it’d be nifty to have the chicken tractor raise hydraulically, but perhaps just beefier components and a longer lever would make it easier to lift manually. The long hitch on the front is great because it allows the tractor to turn without the back tires hitting it.

Here’s what I got going after my girls:

View attachment 588178

View attachment 588179
Ah, okay......that does present more of a challenge.

Your idea using hydraulics would work if you feel like going to that expense and fabrication.

I like the skid idea better.

One thing for sure, if you are going to use the tractor to move it around you are going need to reinforce the structure.
If the coup gets hung up on something you wont know it until something breaks.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #17  
This section:

Panel1.jpg

Make them panels on all four sides so they're outside the wheels when lowered. They can also be hooked/latched together at the four corners. You'd have to reconfigure the one door shown in your picture though.

Panels.jpg

And I maintain, it's a trailer. Tractors have engines and transmissions and such so they're self propelled.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #18  
I have free range chickens and I understand the issue with predators. My plan is to fence them out and continue shooting as many coyotes as possible. But to your situation, in my opinion, the fewer moving parts, the better. Keep It Simple.

Not getting into specific measurements, I would start out with the basic rectangular frame that will rest on the ground. I would attach the rear axle to that it's about 3 feet or so behind the frame. My goal would be to have the frame resting 100% on the ground when not being moved. Then I would attach a trailer jack and 2 inch ball at the front of the frame so that when you lift the frame up high enough to attach it to your tractor, that the entire frame is off the ground and it's rolling on just the rear wheels.

I've seen something like this with oil field stuff that comes through town, so I know it works, but I've never actually done this, so I'm just guessing on the measurements. But with the frame laid out, it should be pretty easy to mock it up and see what works.

IMG_2090.JPG
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #19  
I would start out with the basic rectangular frame that will rest on the ground. I would attach the rear axle to that it's about 3 feet or so behind the frame. My goal would be to have the frame resting 100% on the ground when not being moved. Then I would attach a trailer jack and 2 inch ball at the front of the frame so that when you lift the frame up high enough to attach it to your tractor, that the entire frame is off the ground and it's rolling on just the rear wheels.

Expanding on that .... mount the tongue so the coupler is above ground enough to back a hitch and ball under it. Use a 3 point mounted trailer mover and the three point lift to raise it. No trailer jack needed unless desired.
 
   / Chicken Tractor for Tractors #20  
I really like diggin and eddiewalker ideas.

Just to complicate it more, do you move it with the chickens inside?

Couple vids on YouTube show similar setups and when the human is moving the chicken house, the chickens are walking along still inside the pen.
 

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