How do you maintain a chicken coop?

Semi-Yearly Chicken Care Tasks

  1. Deep clean and sanitize the coop. Once or twice a year, remove everything from the coop, and wash down all surfaces with 1 part bleach to 10 parts water.
  2. Prepare for the winter. Making sure your hens are ready for cold winter weather is an important part of maintaining your flock.

Are chicken coops high maintenance?

Can You Dedicate Some Time Each Day? Although low-maintenance, chickens do require a small amount of daily care as well as some monthly and semi-annual maintenance. Plan on spending 10 minutes a day on your pet chickens, an hour or so per month, plus a few hours twice a year on semi-annual chores.

How do I keep my chicken coop clean and run?

Many people like to use pine bedding, but that will work best if the run is covered and sheltered from rain and snow. For instance, in the Garden Coop (pictured below), pine bedding is used in the enclosed run. That’s do-able because the run is sheltered from the rain.

What should I put on the floor of my chicken coop?

What Do You Use on the Floor of the Coop? For the deep litter method, use pine shavings or hemp bedding as your bottom layer since they are small pieces and compost fairly quickly. Pine shavings are inexpensive and available online or at your local feed store in bales.

How many chickens should a beginner start with?

three chickens
Chickens are extremely flock-oriented, so a good starter flock size is no fewer than three chickens. You should collect about a dozen eggs from three laying hens. A flock of five or six hens is a good choice for slightly larger families.

How often should I change the straw in my chicken coop?

If you’re like me, you’ll want to replace your straw fairly frequently, every week or so, certainly no longer than two weeks. Chickens absolutely love fresh bedding, so as far as they’re concerned, the more you change it, the better.

What do you do with chicken poop?

Chicken owners normally use bedding such as shavings, sawdust, dry leaves, or straw to provide a dry cushion for chickens and to control odor and pests. The coop bedding can be collected with the manure and dumped into a composting bin.

Should I clean my chickens bottom?

Should I wash my chickens bum or clip the feathers? You should do both. Use a sturdy pair of scissors to remove the worst few feathers around the vent and then wash your chickens bottom. You clean the dirty bottom chicken with some baby shampoo or dog shampoo and warm water at 40C (100F).

Do chickens need straw in their coop?

Straw is a fairly good bedding material for chicken coops as it may be low in dust, insulates well, and chickens enjoy scratching in it. However, straw doesn’t release moisture well, does not stay clean for long, harbors pathogens, and, therefore, will need to be replaced frequently.