Good News and Bad News

May 12th, 2009 .

The Good News

Yesterday I got an odd egg in the nest area. It was rough and had lots of red/brown speckles on it – I though it might be Daisy’s first egg.

Is this Daisys first egg?

Is this Daisy's first egg?

This morning when I let the chickens out there was already a cracked egg in the run (I wrote about it in my previous post) so when I came back at lunch time to see this I was pleasantly surprised:

Eggs in the nest area

Eggs in the nest area

It looks like the nest is working and the egg on the right it the biggest one I have had so far!

The Bad News

After I cleaned out the chickens today, I was doing a bit of gardening when I heard a flapping of wings. I looked round and Victoria had managed to fly over the netting that I put up yesterday. I chased her around the garden for a bit until I finally managed to catch her and put her back over the other side. As I was putting her over, I leaned on the netting and the string snapped! Well that lasted a long time!

I blame Victoria!

I blame Victoria!

I took down the netting and decided to think out a way to improve it. I decided that the next attempt would need a stronger chord, and would need to be higher off of the ground, so I got out my drill and some bits of wood and this is what I came up with:

Version 2 of my net fence

Version 2 of my net fence

This is much better than what I did last time – the rope is a lot stronger and the fence is a bit higher. It looks like the rope is not tight enough but this is as tight as I can get it. The reason that it sags is that the netting is pegged tightly into the ground and is pulling down on the rope. If I tightened it any more I think the wood would snap!

The other advantage to the new setup is that it is easier for me to get in and out. Where the netting attaches onto the coop, I have purposefully left the bottom quite loose – instead of being pegged into the ground it is attached to the coop about 1 foot off of the ground. This means that when I move the flower pots off of the bottom of the net I can just about squeeze under it without having to lay face down in chicken poop.

Nests and Netting

May 11th, 2009 .

Well the nest area worked to an extent but they still managed to push it away and make a bald spot.

It nearly worked

It nearly worked

I did get 2 un-cracked eggs but I wasn’t really happy with it so I decided to stop being lazy and screw the pieces of wood down. Now it looks much better.

Now its not going anywhere!

Now it's not going anywhere!

Last week I got fed up of the girls trashing all of my flower beds so I decided to put up some netting. I constructed a frame out of some bamboo canes and some string and put the netting over the top of it. It has worked surprisingly well and the girls have not tried to scratch through it once.

http://www.homechickens.co.uk/images/may2009/netting1.jpg

I lashed the bamboo canes together with some string - Ray Mears would be impressed by my efforts.

At the weekend 2 things happened which made me think I need to upgrade my netting. First of all the girls dug up one of my plants that was outside the netting (it looked like pretty tough but now I think it is dead). Then I planted lots of vegetable seeds in various containers and I realised it would be too hard to stop the girls destroying my crops. Since I was in the mood to get stuff done today I decided to use the remaining netting to fence off half of my garden.

I put up some string between the coop and the fence and draped the netting over the top, pegging it down into the grass. This sounds simple but it was extremely windy and I bent a few pegs. I then put some left over weldmesh on top of the coop to hopefully discourage perching on it (and jumping down the other side). I also had to block off the gap down the side of the coop – when you look at the photos bear in mind that this is temporary and pretty much an experiment. If the girls stay in their section I will do something better and make it more permanent.

Its not perfect but it seems to be working.

It's not perfect but it seems to be working.

This should hopefully stop them from jumping on the roof

This should hopefully stop them from jumping on the roof

A professional bodge job - the less said about this the better!

A professional bodge job - the less said about this the better!

The only problem with this setup is that it makes it extremely difficult to get in and out of that part of the garden. Part of the netting is held down with some large flower pots – I have to move these and squeeze underneath the net (it is pulled very tight so I can’t lift it very high) and try not to lay in any chicken poop. If this goes well I will redo it to have a proper gate.

Built a Fence

April 5th, 2009 .
My New Fence

My New Fence

In preparation for my chickens I spent a couple of hours on Friday evening and Saturday morning building a new fence for my garden.  I bought a couple of rolls of weldmesh and some staples for under £50 and managed to fence off the whole of the garden.  Now I should be able to let the chickens out when they come without too much fear of them disappearing into the neighbours garden!

I have added a picture but try not to look too closely – it’s not the prettiest fence in the world!  Still it is the first time I have built anything like this so I am happy with it.  Also, I have never worked with weldmesh before so this is good practice for future extensions to my chicken run.  One thing I have learnt – weldmesh is bloodthirsty!  I came out of this bleeding from several places on my hands!