Author: Anna & Mark

Adding a nest box to a chicken coop

Hen in nest box

Nest boxThe Australorp took longer to settle when grounded
in the chicken tractor
, but the Red Star seemed immediately content.  In
fact, she hopped up into the nest box within minutes, and I could
almost hear her sigh of relaxation.




That observation made
me think that improper nest boxes was one of the big reasons our
pullets were
flying
the coop
last
month.  I kept finding stashes of eggs around the garden, and
most escapes from the pasture happened in the morning during
egg-laying hours.  Small wonder — we had absolutely the
worst nest-box situation in that coop since we had initially
planned it to be a broiler coop.  In fact, there was no nest box, just a
depression in the straw in a corner where
Installing a nest boxseveral hens were laying.



Even in the
laying-hen coop, into which we moved half of our young flock, the
nest box
was
just a milk crate full of straw sitting on the ground.  Our
other hens hadn’t complained, so we figured if it ain’t broke,
don’t fix it.  These new pullets, though, thought they
deserved better, and Mark agreed.  He
built a simple nest box out of scrap lumber
and used a shelf
bracket to hold it in place along the wall edging the roosting
area.  By taking out a board in the coop wall and leaving
part of the nest box uncovered, he was even able to make the nest
box accessible without walking into the coop.  (The board
went back onto the wall as a door.)




Exterior nest-box doorI filled the new nest box with straw and
three golf balls (to prime the pump) and waited.  The first
day, the eggs were still on the ground, but once the hens woke up
to a nest box right in their faces, they decided to use it. 
Ever since, eggs have been clean and right where they’re supposed
to be.  Success!




Chicken-keeping books
generally tell you to make one nest box for every three hens, but
in my experience, all of the hens want to lay in the same
spot.  Maybe that’s one of the reasons our pullets were so
discontent with their previous housing situation — who wants to
be sat on while you’re trying to lay an egg?



Our automatic chicken waterer makes it easy to
provide your flock with the basics so you can focus on
improving their quality of living.

Welcoming the EZ Miser kit

Five-gallon EZ
MiserSeveral of you emailed to ask if there would
be a kit version of the
EZ
Miser
coming
soon.  Mark and I had to spend a couple of weeks perfecting
the process, but
the kit is now
live
!  To
thank our loyal customers for their past business, we’ve put all
of our EZ Miser kits on sale this week, so you can treat your
chickens to even cleaner water for as low as 77 cents per bird!




Our EZ Miser kits are
also available overseas, although they cost more to mail than our
Original DIY
kits

Please scroll down to the bottom of the page at
www.avianaquamiser.com/ezkit for more information.



If you don’t have the
cash right now to buy an EZ Miser kit, but still want to give them
a try, enter our
contest
for the chance to win a free kit. 
Congratulations to
Robin and Eva, who won free chicken
waterers as part of our last contest!

How to win an egg-drop contest

Egg drop with finsI participated in one egg-drop contest when I
was in elementary school, lost miserably, and immediately put it
out of my mind.  While gathering hidden
pullet eggs
out of our pasture, though, one slipped through
my fingers and hit the ground, but only cracked instead of
shattering.  That got me thinking that there are probably
outside-the-box solutions to the old egg-drop conundrum (even
though mine — choosing a pullet egg because it has a tougher
shell — is against most contests’ rules).




I started wandering
around the internet in search of the best egg-drop contraption,
but got bogged down in those afore-mentioned rules.  Some
contests don’t let you include parachutes or other forms of
air-resistance, while others forbid modern packing materials like
bubble wrap and styrofoam peanuts.  (If these are legal,
though, they’re great components of a winning design!)  One
forum user recommended adding angled fins (as is shown in the
photo above from
Colorado
University
) to
make your contraption swirl, which will slow things down even
without a parachute.  Another site recommended sponges,
blown-up balloons, or breakfast cereal as untraditional enough
that they might sidestep the packing material ban.




Bungee egg dropAnother way to look at the issue is to
disperse the energy that impacts the egg when it hits the ground
— think of this as a whiplash-prevention device.  The
box-within-a-box design shown here came from the
2004 KMSO Egg
Drop Contest

and used rubber bands between the two structures to dispel that
whiplash energy.  When a contraption like this hits the
ground, the inner box will bounce in relation to the outer box,
but shouldn’t hit anything, and thus the egg doesn’t crack. 
(It might scramble, though….) 




You can use any
stretchy substance in place of the rubber bands, and one simple
alternative is to place the egg in an uninflated balloon (or a
nylon stocking), tie the end of the balloon around a pencil, and
then use the pencil to suspend the egg within a box.  Of
course, you’d have to weigh down the bottom of the box to make
sure your contraption doesn’t land upside-down.




One scientist even
recommended simply placing your egg inside an unbreakable bottle
full of salt water.  The salt helps the egg float while the
water changes the impact force you’d
Best
egg drop designusually get into a pressure distributed all
the way around the egg.  Since the egg is round (the perfect
shape to stand up under pressure), it shouldn’t crack.
 
I haven’t seen any
hands-on attempts to use this method, though, so be sure to try it
out before bringing a salted egg to your contest.




I can’t resist
closing by showing you yet another winning egg-drop entry. 
This one survived a 145-foot drop in the
atlanticbt
Inaugural Egg Drop Contest
.  It looks like a combination of the parachute
and bungee method to me.




Are there excellent
egg-drop methods I’ve missed in this post?  Leave a comment
and share your winning design!



Our chicken waterer keeps hens happy
with clea
n water.