Author: Anna & Mark

Chicken coop pophole

Building a pophole

While we’re waiting for
the stars to align and allow us to build our
perfect
chicken coop
, I
figured we could put a bit of time into sprucing up the current coop to
solve at least a few
Preening roosterof the most pressing
problems.  First on the list was creating real doors so our
popholes could be closed against predators (and against chickens who
think the grass is greener on the other side of the coop).




To refresh your memory,
our coop has several chicken-sized doors (popholes) in the walls to let
me turn the flock out into a different pasture every week without
moving their home.  (You can read more about
the
rotational pasture concept here
.)  The popholes are in
the right places and work great, but I never got around to putting
doors on our to-do list, so chickens occasionally go out the wrong hole.




Chicken coop popholeLuckily, it doesn’t take much
to make a quality pophole door.  Continuing with our theme of
using next to no cash to build the coop, Mark blocked off part of the
current pophole with some scrap lumber leftover from another project,
then he built the door out of more of the same.  He did affix a
hinge and latch to solidify the arrangement, but otherwise, no purchase
was necessary to make our pophole door.




Our chickens won’t care
one bit about the upgrade, but we’ll rest easier knowing the flock is
shut up tight in the evening.  One of my favorite aspects of
homesteading is the way every little job makes your life a little
easier, and pophole doors definitely fit into that category.



Our chicken waterer solves the filthy water
problem so you can spend your time enjoying your flock.

How old does a hen have to be to lay an egg

Chicken eggOur pullets must read the
blog, because they started laying soon after I posted that
their
brother was fertile

They were about 19 weeks old when the first little pullet egg showed up
in the coop, and I’ve seen an egg every day or two from each of them
ever since.




If you’re waiting with
baited breath for your young hens to begin laying, you should be aware
that a couple of different factors can affect age at first lay. 
Chicken varieties vary quite a bit in how fast they mature, with
egg-laying hybrids like
Golden Comets sometimes popping out their
first egg at 16 weeks.  (That said, the Golden Comets we raised
from chicks in 2008 didn’t lay until they were 19 weeks old, just like
this year’s
Australorps.)



Perhaps even more
important than breed of chicken is time of year.  As the days get
shorter in the fall, mature hens often stop laying, and late-started
pullets may not even start producing until spring.  Last year, we
had to
turn
on lights in the chicken coop
to get our
late-April-hatched pullets to pick up the egg-laying pace.  I
suspect that this year’s pullets (hatched at the beginning of March)
will avoid that problem, and that their relatively early lay is also
due to experiencing so many long days early in their lives. 




Point of lay pulletAssuming you don’t miss the
boat and have to wait until spring, your hens should definitely be
laying by the time they’re 26 weeks old.  The first eggs are often
small, but with big yolks inside — I generally use two pullet eggs in
the place of one adult egg when cooking.




Don’t expect to be able
to hatch out chicks from these pullet eggs, though.  I took a look
at a few yolks as I was preparing our morning omelet and noticed that
the blastoderm in the pullet eggs had an unfertilized look. 
Similarly,
Joel
Salatin reports that if pullet eggs do hatch, they tend to yield up
small chicks that are less likely to survive
.



By the way, these hens
who are just starting to produce are known as “point-of-lay
pullets”.  This is a great thing to look for if you want to start
a laying flock the easiest possible way.  There’s no fiddling with
baby chicks or agonizing over whether your hens are too old to be
productive, just lots of nutritious, homegrown eggs to feed your family.



Our chicken waterer keeps hens well hydrated
with clean water so they can churn out eggs.

Incubator security

Incubating chicken eggsLast year, we were just
figuring out incubation, so we raised 13 chicks starting in late April,
6 chicks starting in mid May, 9 chicks starting in mid June, and 14
chicks starting in late August.  Since we kept out eleven chickens
(
four of
whom we gave to my brother
), that left us with 33 heirloom-size
broilers
in the freezer by the end of the year.  The frozen
meat was just barely enough to get us through.



This year, we kept back
one cockerel to
replace our
rooster
, but devoted
the rest of our two spring flocks to the freezer.  As a result,
we’ve already put away 30 birds, and our last incubator run — due to
hatch in early September — will be icing on the cake. 




Taped plugBut
we’re still not taking any chances.  I thought I’d worked all of
the kinks out of my incubation technique by the time I wrote
Permaculture
Chicken: Incubation Handbook
…then I accidentally
unplugged the turner and had to start over during our last hatch. 
So this time around, I’ve taped both the incubator and turner plugs
into their sockets and am quite confident I won’t think they’re
anything else when I mess around with the power strip.




Here’s hoping we’ll have
another great hatch and plenty of delicious meat to eat this winter.



Our chicken waterer is the drown-proof and
disease-resistant option for chicks from day 1.