Welcome to TheOhioOutdoors
Wanting to join the rest of our members? Login or sign up today!
Login / Join

TOO Homesteading

5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,748
238
North Central Ohio
She's ready to house em for a week so they know where they need to sleep each night.

Drunk shopping on the Menard's App last night said it was a hell of a lot smarter to buy a $35 screen door then dick w/making one. Total invested in hardware was $75 today, everything else was already here. Just need to add some fencing on the inside so they don't tear that screen to shreds, then onto the outside run.

Till then, they are safe and I can get em outside when needed. Spring kit on the door and an auto-latch ensure that everytime that door closes she'll lock. A small 3" barrel latch on the bottom of the door will ensure nothing gets in or out at night.
20230610_170343.jpg

20230610_165855.jpg

20230610_165924.jpg
20230610_165940.jpg
20230610_170040.jpg
 
Last edited:

5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,748
238
North Central Ohio
Chicken training is going well.
-They have learned the coop is home.
-They still sleep in piles on the floor, but more are using the branches and lowest roosting bar during the day.
-They have learned how to use their small door leading outside and how to return. This includes using the brick as a step as the diamond plate is slippery.
-They have had both fenced and free range exposure outside and stayed close.
-They have all learned that slight pressure directing them to the front of the shed and their door is open = go inside. Once one commits, they all follow quickly.

20230616_132609.jpg

20230616_134351.jpg


A swing and a dust bath container rounds out the inside for a bit.
20230616_132629.jpg

These bitches are trained, get to layin🤣!
 

5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,748
238
North Central Ohio
Been a week, not sure I'm going to build an enclosed run this summer. The last 3 days I've opened their small door at 6:30-7am, and leave it open all day. They get all kinds of squirrely in the evenings as the sun sets, really trying our their wings and legs, and exploring. Most of the day they prefer to be inside, just doing chicken shit, lol. They're also learning/establishing ranks on the roosting bars.

They're now approx. 17wks old, no eggs yet. Got em on Kalmbach medicated chick crumbles, but next bag will be their Henhouse Reserve to supplement their daily outside roaming.

Cheap entertainment at this point lol.

20230620_211228.jpg


20230621_070245.jpg
 

bowhunter1023

Owner/Operator
Staff member
49,310
288
Appalachia
@5Cent the free ranging is cool until they discover your wife’s flowers and landscaping. Mine free ranged our property for a couple months. Now they are limited to the pasture. Got tired of cleaning up the mess around the house every day.
Same. The shitting all over the basketball court and back patio got old. I'm build a chicken tractor for summer use and they'll get a new area for winter. I prefer free range, but they don't know how to respect boundaries. Ask my neighbors 😂
 

5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,748
238
North Central Ohio
2wks in and they had their first run in with a wild tom cat this eventing. 8 of 10 made it inside and onto highest roost bar, while 2 of the Reds stood firm on the high ground (on top of mulch piles each N & S positins respectively) to defend the territory. Was a sight to see, and thankfully all 10 made it home and are tucked in.
 

Hedgelj

Senior Member
Supporting Member
8,073
189
Mohicanish
2wks in and they had their first run in with a wild tom cat this eventing. 8 of 10 made it inside and onto highest roost bar, while 2 of the Reds stood firm on the high ground (on top of mulch piles each N & S positins respectively) to defend the territory. Was a sight to see, and thankfully all 10 made it home and are tucked in.
Did the tom cat suffer a high speed lead injection?

The semi feral barn cats don't last long coming across the road or up the hill they get lead poisoning.