Author: Anna & Mark

Chicken tractor doors

Homemade chicken tractorOur
fourth tractor was based on the simple remesh
and log design of
the first three chicken tractors
, but added some new
features.  Most notable were
two additional access doors.




We like to give our
chickens kitchen scraps to supplement the storebought feed and the
plants and insects they get from the ground.  Our girls love the
scraps a bit too much — when I go to dump a bucket of scraps through
our first chicken tractor’s door, the hens mob me and I have a hard
time emptying the bucket.  The new tractor includes a small access
hatch on the top (which you can see on the top right of the
photo).  Now I can dump a bucket of scraps into the tractor
without getting mobbed.




Another problem with the
old tractor was the eggs.  Since the tractor only had one access
door, I had to open it and reach my hand around the corner to get the
eggs.  Our hens often thought I was bringing them more food, which
made it difficult to get to the nest box.




Access door to the nest boxFor
our fourth tractor, Mark created the nest box out of part of a
dryer.  He cut a hole in the back of the dryer to give the hens
access, and left the door against the outside wall so that we can
easily reach in and get the eggs without going through the main part of
the coop.  As an added incentive for laying, Mark cut a picture of
Colonel Sanders off of a take-out bag and glued it to the inside wall
of the nest box.  Just a little reminder to our girls that they
need to lay, or else!




Stay tuned for a
description of our fifth and best chicken tractor.  Meanwhile,
check out our
automatic chicken waterer, perfect for use in tractors.

This post is part of our Introduction to Chicken Tractors series
Read all of the entries:

What is a chicken tractor

Chicken tractor

We have three chicken tractors, and I wouldn’t be surprised if we have twice that many in a few
years.  For the uninitiated, a chicken tractor is a moveable
chicken coop/run with everything your chickens need in a small
space.  Each morning, I move the tractors to a new patch of lawn,
where they scratch for bugs, engulf greenery, and fertilize the
ground.  We get free lawnmowing and fertilizing along with better
eggs
while the chickens get healthy additions to their diet — it’s a
win-win.

Barred Plymouth RockAnimals are an important part of any natural
ecosystem, but most modern
farming tries to cut them out of the picture. 
Chicken tractors
put animals back in, but in a controlled manner.  Left to their
own devices, free range chickens would make short work of a vegetable
garden, eating up your tomatoes and strawberries, scratching your mulch
aside, and generally making a nuisance of themselves.  (Yes, I
speak from personal experience.)  On the other hand, pen chickens
up in a permanent coop/run and they will eat all of the greenery in a
matter of days, leaving bare earth which doesn’t provide any of their
food.

Some folks drag
the tractors directly over their garden to fertilize, but I’ve found
this is difficult with raised beds, and also gives the chickens less
food.  So we added the mulching lawnmower to our chicken tractor
system, allowing us to cut grass fertilized by our chickens, then use
the greenery as mulch or compost in the garden.  Thanks, hens!

We invented our homemade chicken
waterer
specifically for tractors.  Check it out to prevent
spilling of water on uneven terrain.

This post is part of our Introduction to Chicken Tractors series
Read all of the entries: