Our chicken coop plans are drawn to help you easily build a chicken coop. We have several styles and sizes of chicken coop plans to choose from.
Lean To Roof Chicken Coop Plans
Using a lean to roof is the simplest way to put a roof on your chicken coop the single sloping roof that goes from one side of the coop to the other allow you to use a single board for the roof rafter instead of creating a ridge and having two roof planes. The nesting box can be either inside the coop or added as a box on the outside of the coop.
The gable roof design creates a larger space up in the roof that some builders use to create a roost for their chickens. The double sloping roof resembles a barn which adds a certain charm to your backyard chicken area. The nesting boxes can be built under the main roof inside the coop or installed on the outside with their own roof that fts up to easily give you access to the eggs and cleaning.
The A Frame Chicken Run is the simplest chicken coop to build. Its simple design also makes it the most cost effective chicken coop plan to build. Most A frame coops are easy to move around the yard which makes them great to use as a "chicken tractor". This allows you to fertize different areas of the yard and keep from ruining the ground under the chicken run.
The A-frame chicken coop comes in several design styles. It can be built as a two story coop with the nest boxes and roosts up in the roof of the coop and the chicken run down below on the ground level. It can also be built with the coop on one end and the run on the other end.
Chicken Runs
A chicken run can be added to any chicken coop design. The chicken run allows you to safely let your chickens out of the coop and still have protection from predators and keep them from wandering off. The typical size of chicken run per chicken is 10 square feet. Even with a chicken run that has protected walls and roof there is still a possibity of predators digging under the barrier. Keeping the door to your chicken coop closed and locked at night is the best way to protect them at night.
Chickens love to take a "dust bath". They will dig in the dirt and throw it on themselves and anything around them. Taking a dust bath helps them clean themselves and to get rid of parasites, mites, fleas and ce.
The dirt and sand soak up oils from their skin and feathers. The oils are removed from their feathers and skin when they shake it off.
The parasites are less kely to stay around with all the dirt and will be less kely to stay on your chickens.
They like warm and dry dirt or sand that is loose. Adding food grade DE, Diatomaceous Earth, to the dirt that the chickens take a dust bath in will help to control ce and mites. After the dust bath they will shake off the dust and then preen their feathers. You can make a chicken dust bath by providing a low walled container. Most home stores sell a tub for mixing concrete or tile mortar in. Kitty tter pans also work great. They makes the perfect dust bath tub for your chickens. If your dust bath is in a container make sure to drill holes in the bottom so water can drain out when it rains. If you do not want to use a tub your chickens will find any dirt patch and start making dust. If you use a tub for your chicken dust bath it should be cleaned of chicken droppings every two or three weeks. In hot weather chickens will did holes in the dirt and take a break in the cooler soil.