Easy chicken installer
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My tunnels protect my yard from damage from scratching and chicken poop everywhere. I also love them to protect my vegetable garden during the summer since no amount of fencing keeps them off the tomatoes.
I zip tie the length together to make it easy to move them. And thanks to the hens, they stay weed free. We used to do that when I was a kid. But we made mazes.
We did it to get them back into the coop. We made a large one around all of the chickens then gradually shrank it down until they had to go into the coop.
Wow, what fun this idea is! Adaptable, easy, and solves a lot of chicken issues, like being able to regulate whether you just need them to eat the bugs in an area, or want them to clear the ground for planting, too. I love that they can share the same basic area with freedom to run for both the dogs and the chickens, without worrying about raccoons or foxes getting to them too easily!
Thanks for this great inspiration. I have used chick wire for my tunnel cover, with pvc pipe slipped over pieces of rebar pounded every feet into the soil and bent into a arch then slipped over another piece of rebar opposite the first one, to support the tunnel shape.
Otherwise, if you have dogs, cts, or wildlife, -even eagles or hawks with access to your garden, they hunting animals will jump onto the chick wire fencing and kill the chickens right through the wire. Been there, done that,.
Elizabeth at eouren gmail. The tunnel can be moved and then secured with garden stakes or basically a length of thick wire, re-bar, etc. Or another idea would be a short length of PVC pipe with a hole drilled through it near the top. You can also get by with a spool of wire, wire cutters and some small pliers to thread, wrap and tighten the wire. I made bird cages with just these few items.
Thanks for the article. I could then bolt each section together, with wood slats and screws, to create more structural strength and protection from predators. Chickens are a safe and much more efficient alternative to insecticides.
I really like the idea of the pallets since I have access to them. Is there anyway you can send me pictures of your setup and what kind of wire you used? Used zip ties because of one weaker hand from surgery.
Just extra room to roam. They come back in for food or roosting time. The south end is enclosed the same as the sides. The north end is a pallet wall with a wooden door. The peak area is just chicken wire. There is chicken wire attached around the bottom and covered with a bit of dirt to discourage digging. Lots of wood staples and zip ties. The frame was put together with construction wood screws.
Power screw driver. Last I added where a tree branch with lots of limbs and an old broom and mop handles for roosting. A 6 seat nesting box is below a long open front wooden box I made where the chickens huddle together when its cold.
Its off the ground a couple of feet on a simple frame. It faces east. Storns usually travel through west to east.
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