Category Archives: chickens

Repurposed: A Bathroom Turned Chicken Coop

We are nearly completed on the chicken coop and it has come along beautifully! It started its life as an ugly vermin-infested bathroom on top of an old worn out deck and now has been repurposed as a chicken coop. 95% of the materials we used to build this coop came from that old bathroom. The only things we bought to make it were some paint (around $30), some nails (around $30) and some hardware wire (around $20). We also decided to purchase a paint sprayer (about $100) that we plan on using in future house projects but we could have done it by hand.

Unpainted front viewAfter we put on the siding

We didn’t necessarily have to paint it, but I’ve always thought that it takes so little to make it just a little more finished looking. Most of a makeover is the façade, but it makes such a striking difference! A chicken coop doesn’t have to be ugly! And since we will be going into it every day to collect eggs and check on chickens why not enjoy the experience? The paint sprayer made it so easy too. We finished painting the exterior in about 20 minutes compared with the 3+ hours it probably would have taken us using rollers and brushes.

Pretty coop After painting the inside and outside, hanging the door and painting the trim (with a chicken in the window)

I normally don’t like all the power tools (like the chainsaw), but I actually really enjoyed painting with this sprayer. Britton had to actually ask so that he could use it too!

Painting with sprayer

We chose a color called Cozumel, but I think it should have been called Calypso as it is nearly the same color as the Calypso Bar in Rincón! Because we had saved some time in painting the exterior and we were having so much fun with the sprayer we decided to paint the trim and inside with our leftover white paint from when we painted the cabana. It really brightened it up!

Walls unpaintedInside coop
Interior Before and After

Chicken nipples BK 1
!Gringo Loco!

Since we had a little extra time we decided to bring a few of the chickens to check out the work in progress and have a little fun!

We still have a little work to do like secure it with the wire and we are also thinking of building a porch onto the coop so we can watch the funny little birds run around. Overall, though, it has become very close to the vision we had conceived of when I drew this design months ago!

Coop plans
Manifesting reality!

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How Do You Get Chicks to Stop Pecking Each Other?

This was the question we have been asking ourselves for the past few days. The chicks have developed a pretty nasty habit of occasionally pecking each other (usually the rear and tail) sometimes to the point of bleeding. Once they see the color red they keep pecking and pecking. In Colorado we never had any problem. We only had three chicks at a time and used a red heat lamp because they say the red color of the lamp camouflages the red in the blood.

We knew we wouldn’t need a heat lamp for long here in Puerto Rico and we didn’t see one at the local agro, so we figured they would be fine for a couple of weeks with a regular heat lamp. It could have been the lighting or just the sheer number of them, but we started to see the occasional peck here and there until just this week we saw some gruesome pecked sores and knew we had to make some changes.

vicious chicks
Ouch!

Raising this many chicks in a brand new environment has been quite a learning experience. I am glad we had some basic knowledge of chickens from before in Greeley, but these differences (number of birds and new place) have presented new challenges we never had before. When we saw the first major pecking incidence on a chick we thought it was an isolated event so we just brought her and another chick buddy (they will chirp loudly if they are alone) into the house with us (in a cardboard box) until she began to heal.

Big Chicken Tractor
The two tractors

By then they were also needing new bedding/litter much more frequently in the bathtub and were outgrowing it, so we decided to build them the chicken tractor. They quickly outgrew the first one, so we built another one and then we moved the two sick bay patients into the smaller tractor. This worked for a while until we saw more of the pecking going on. We tried throwing them kitchen scraps (they love lettuce!) and that kept them busy and occupied for a while, but the pecking continued. A bullied bird in an enclosure can’t really escape the peckers and so the pecking continues. When we saw these gruesome peckings I knew we had to do something else.

IMG_5387
Three chicks hanging out under a flower bush

So today we opened the flood gates and let them out to roam in the chainlink fenced yard near the cabana. We were nervous because they are only 5 weeks old and are still very vulnerable to predators like the hawks and they are still small enough to get through the fence links, but we had to do something. It’s that balance between freedom and security. Too much time in a cage (total security) will drive a bird (or person!) crazy with boredom enough to peck each other, but not enough (total freedom) and they are vulnerable to becoming hawk bait.

Mohawk Chick
Our little black and white Mohawk chick is doing well. Chicken aficionados: Guess what breed she is

The good thing is that chickens like to stay near to where their shelter, food and water is located which means that while they are really hard to catch if they don’t want you to, they will stay relatively close by. Because they are near us and the house they also have some relative protection as well. As evening closed in, the chicks started to huddle together and we easily placed them into the chicken tractor to sleep.

This whole experience has also put a fire under us to get the chicken coop finished ASAP so that we can move them into there in the evenings instead of the tractor. It’s coming along nicely and will probably be finished tomorrow or the next day and painted soon after. Britton has done a great job on it and built the whole thing himself with only a little assistance from me.

Coop base IMG_5406

CoopProgression of a coop

We continue to learn new lessons as we put this new life of ours together here in Puerto Rico. And life is ever the great teacher- for the lessons will never end as long as you are growing as a person. I just hope that not too many tail feathers were lost in the process of learning this one! 🙂

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How to Catch a Baby Chicken

When the chicks have a problem they will let you know.  They start to chirp and squeak.  Sometimes this means they need water, or food.  Sometimes it also means they are playing football with a nail, yeah they do that…  Run from one side of the chicken tractor to the other with the nail or bugs while being chased by the rest of the flock.

Big Chicken TractorChicken Tractors

The other day we heard them squawking and Cassie looked out the door to see what they might be up to.  She says “Uht oh BK, some of the chicks are loose!”.  They had apparently snuck out thru the bottom of the chicken tractor that was laying on some uneven surface. We had made one and then a larger “chicken tractor” because they had quickly outgrown the bathtub and a chicken tractor never has to be cleaned…only moved. Anyhow, we were able to catch 2 of the 3 fairly easy but there was a small leghorn that simply didn’t want to be caught and she is, as we found out, much faster than we are.  Plus she can slip thru a chain link fence with ease and taunt us.

We spent quite a bit of time chasing her before we came to the realization that it just  wasn’t going to work.  She has some talents we simply don’t.  Speed.

I had just about given up when I decided that we are humans and should be able to outsmart a baby chicken.  Right?!  So I devised a ‘cartoon trap’.

Chicken trap
Cartoon Trap

I put some bait under a box and held the box up with a stick attached to a string.  We tried food as bait, no dice.  We tried water, nope.  It came to our attention that the only thing she wanted was to be with the flock but she couldn’t find a way back in.  So I made a small cage out of wire and put another chick inside it so she could not escape.

Chick as bait

It worked perfectly!  In about 2 minutes she had walked over to see the other chick and was under the box.  Trapped!

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