Backyard Chickens Books

Backyard Chickens Books

Building A Chicken Coop Book

Nowadays, pursuit of health has become an unshakable faith. Healthy diet is certainly a key part in a healthy life style, which means you need to eat the right food. So it is not a surprise if you want to keep away from buying eggs full of antibiotics and to build your own chicken coop.

Have a flock in your backyard, try a little villeggiatura and enjoy green and safe eggs everyday, isn't it sounds lovely? Before starting the project, it is important to make a plan first. Here are the things you need to take into your consideration: budget, location, size, light, ventilation and predator. Let's talk about these one by one.

Budget, this is the key factor of your whole plan. How much can you spend on the chicken coop may decide whether your plan can be accomplished eventually. After all, this is building a chicken coop is meant to color your life, not to influence it. What's more, there is another part in the budget, time. How many hours can you spend on building the coop, maintaining and cleanning it every week ? These two answers are things you should find out at the very beginning.

Location and size, I want to talk about these two points together, since they are deeply connected. Chickens need spaces to make a comfortable and happy lives, thus, they can lay eggs regularly. Find out a place level and won't have flooding in rainy days in your backyard, and measure it. Most likely it will be the place to build your coop. Generally, each chicken needs 4-5 quare feet inside the coop for optimal health, egg production and individual space. With the size of the space and the flock you want to have, you can decide to build a small coop or a large one.

Chicken is the kind of animal which is very loyal and dependent on sun. The sunrise makes, the sunset but the rest. Make sure your chickens get enough sunshine to keep them healthy. Several windows facing the sun will solve the problem perfectly.

Ventilation becomes especially important if your coop is in a damp place or just in summer. After rain, good ventilation will helps to dry the coop in a short time. And in summer, cool wind is really nice for the chickens. Still, window is the best way to have good ventilation.

The last but definitley not the least, predator. Predators can attack your chickens from sky, ground and under ground. To protect your chickens from top, fences in firm material will work. So as to predators coming from ground. If your enemies come from under ground, your fences should be there too, at least a feet down.

These are just some simple tips for building your own chicken coop, if you really want to build a good one in the most easy and saving way, I strongly recommend the ebook "Building a chicken coop". In the book you will find more than you need in starting your chicken-raise career. If you are not satisfied with the book, which I really doubt about, a 60-days 100% money back guarantee will save your complaint. Grab A Copy Click here

About the Author

Download Click here

Baby Chicken Question: How to care for them and ensure they live to adulthood?

My sons were given a baby rooster and hen today and I have no idea how to care for them.
We have a large backyard and plenty of fenced-off space for them. I just need ideas, books, or websites with nitty gritty chicken raising facts. LOL
Thanks in advance

Number one: MAKE SURE you have a dog to guard them. Or a cage that is completely enclosed. The problem with chickens is EVERYTHING eats them. If you've got a pen with no top, the raccoons, oppossums, and owls will come in through the top. If it's not done very well at the bottom, the foxes, coyotes, dogs, and rats will crawl underneath. If you have a very nice enclosure (covered on top, wired tightly at the bottom) with a roost inside, that should be pretty good without a dog. Otherwise, a dog trained to guard them will make a big difference.

Once you've got them protected from the wildlife and local dogs, keeping them alive and healthy is pretty simple. Make sure they have unlimited access to clean water, and poultry feed. At the beginning, they need turkey and chick starter, which can be purchased from MFA or Orschlen's or another feed store. Once they get bigger you can switch over to the adult feed.

If they still don't have any feathers yet (all down) they need to be kept in a warm enclosure. Get a large animal carrier or wall off a closet, line it with newspaper and woodchips, and provide them with a heat lamp (also to be found at Orschlen's/MFA/etc.) Make sure it's close enough to keep them warm, but far away enough they won't be burning their baby heads on it.

Once they've started feathering out, they can be moved outside (keep the heat lamp for night-time) and eventually when they are fully feathered and grown, they won't need it anymore.

Sometimes chickens get mites on their legs. If this happens, get some baby oil and some q-tips, and coat their legs in it every day until the mites are gone.

Hope this helps. Good luck with the little dudes.

Raising Chickens For Dummies
Raising Chickens For Dummies
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $10.42
You save: $9.57 (48%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Backyard Chickens' Guide to Coops and Tractors: Planning, Building, and Real-Life Advice (Members Backyard Chickens.Com)
Backyard Chickens' Guide to Coops and Tractors: Planning, Building, and Real-Life Advice (Members Backyard Chickens.Com)
List Price: $21.99
Sale Price: $13.22
You save: $8.77 (40%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
The Working Chicken
The Working Chicken
List Price: $0.99
Chickens In Your Backyard: A Beginner's Guide
Chickens In Your Backyard: A Beginner's Guide
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $4.65
You save: $10.30 (69%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Building Chicken Coops For Dummies
Building Chicken Coops For Dummies
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $11.25
You save: $8.74 (44%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
The Chicken Whisperer's Guide to Keeping Chickens: Everything You Need to Know . . . and Didn't Know You Needed to Know About Backyard and Urban Chickens
The Chicken Whisperer's Guide to Keeping Chickens: Everything You Need to Know . . . and Didn't Know You Needed to Know About Backyard and Urban Chickens
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $11.99
You save: $8.00 (40%)
  Eligible for free shipping!
Raising Backyard Chickens: The Coop, The Scoop and The Poop
Raising Backyard Chickens: The Coop, The Scoop and The Poop
Raising Chickens: A Country Living Guide (Country Living Guides)
Raising Chickens: A Country Living Guide (Country Living Guides)
List Price: $3.99
EATING the Working Chicken
EATING the Working Chicken
List Price: $0.99
The Backyard Homestead: Produce all the food you need on just a quarter acre!
The Backyard Homestead: Produce all the food you need on just a quarter acre!
List Price: $18.95
Sale Price: $11.75
You save: $7.20 (38%)
  Eligible for free shipping!


[affmage source="clickbank" results="5"]chicken coop[/affmage]
[affmage source="cj" results="4"]KEYWORDS[/affmage]


Comments are closed.