chickennuggt
In the Brooder
Im planning on building a new coop for my chickens and I'm new to raising chickens can anyone tell me a ways to build a chicken coop to be secure from raccoons? And i live in Michigan
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When I first started raising chickens (only about three years ago) We got a premade coop with a completely enclosed run (10' x 10'). We had one chicken die (strangled through the fence). We put plastic garden hardware cloth around the base of the run and it works pretty well. If I had the budget and know-how, I'd consider using horse wire (the 2" x 4" welded wire fencing) and put the much cheaper plastic fencing around the base. While the welded wire is expensive, if you wanted to put it overhead, it'd keep out flying/climbing things and the plastic fence would only be needed around the bottom where the raccoons would be reaching through the fence to get the chickens.While our livestock guardian dogs cannot resist a free chicken snack that stupidly hops over the fence, those same dogs are (I have zero doubt) the only reason we haven't had a single predator even attempt to come near the chicken enclosure. Yes, chickens and guineas have both been taken by coyotes, but only when they venturned out of the confines of the fenced area around our house before dawn...and always on the far side well away from the dogs. During the day, our presence and the dogs' ferocious bark deter predators far beyond the fence line and the birds roam further afield with daylight. I wish I could enclose their run with hardware cloth, but our budget simply cant afford that.
Raccoons can climb too. That's how our attack happened-he waddled along the neighbors' fence and dropped into our run (tore the bird netting). Another neighbor had raccoon fur stuck four feet up her secured run.When I first started raising chickens (only about three years ago) We got a premade coop with a completely enclosed run (10' x 10'). We had one chicken die (strangled through the fence). We put plastic garden hardware cloth around the base of the run and it works pretty well. If I had the budget and know-how, I'd consider using horse wire (the 2" x 4" welded wire fencing) and put the much cheaper plastic fencing around the base. While the welded wire is expensive, if you wanted to put it overhead, it'd keep out flying/climbing things and the plastic fence would only be needed around the bottom where the raccoons would be reaching through the fence to get the chickens.
Yep. That’s why you either have a wire overhead or secure your coop at night. You can do with the horse wire in the overhead because chickens won’t be in the overhead, so even if the raccoon reaches through, he is not in arm’s reach of a chicken. It is super important to cover areas where chickens may get close to the wire.Raccoons can climb too. That's how our attack happened-he waddled along the neighbors' fence and dropped into our run (tore the bird netting). Another neighbor had raccoon fur stuck four feet up her secured run.