The Chicken Palace: When Lazy Leads To Awesome

The Girls’ coop satisfies their housing requirement and allows me to exert minimal—yet efficient—effort.

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by Cyn Cady

The Chicken Palace
Cyn Cady

Remember that saying, “If you want something done, get a busy person to do it”? Well, I have a new saying: “If you want something done efficiently, get a lazy person to do it.”

It’s hilarious to me that people think I am this super-energetic, do-it-all type. Oh sure, I like to start a lot of projects, but when it comes time to actually maintain those projects … well, blecchh.

So, when I built the Chicken Palace, I designed it to fit my needs as well as the needs of The Girls. A basic henhouse has a roost, a floor and a couple of nest boxes. After studying a whole bunch of designs, I created my own, based around the following rule:

No bending over. Ever.

This means the run is tall enough that I can stand in it to rake it out and change food and water. (OK, there’s a little bending over to pick up the feeder and waterer, but not anything like hunching over a cut-off rake in a 4-foot tall enclosure scraping chicken poop into a cut-off shovel.) It also means that the henhouse is on stilts, with the egg boxes accessible from the outside, at a height that’s easy for me to reach in and collect eggs. Little kids have to reach up, but that’s their problem.

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For cleanup, the whole back of the henhouse opens up. Again, no bending. And, I’m following the deep-litter method, which makes cleanup even easier—in fact, almost nonexistent. Deep litter allows droppings to accumulate in the litter material, composting it right inside the coop. All I have to do is pop open the back every few days, stir the fresh poop into the bedding material (I use pine shavings), toss a few more handfuls of shavings on top to freshen things up, and boom, you’re done. Notice, once again: No bending.

The Chicken Palace
Cyn Cady

And here’s the very best part about the composting/deep-litter method: Cleaning the henhouse only needs to happen two to three times a year. You heard me, people. Amazing, right? And, when I do have to finally bite the bullet and clean it out, the wheelbarrow rolls right under it. I just lift the litter board and rake the composted stuff into the wheelbarrow … all without bending over. And I don’t even have to do a good job; in fact, it’s important to leave some of the composty stuff in there to continue the process.

For a deep-litter henhouse, ventilation is key; I’ve got open eaves (screened with hardware cloth) and a window in the back door to allow cross-ventilation, so the ammonia can escape. The fresh shavings also cut down on odor. That’s another thing: My coop doesn’t stink. It doesn’t smell like roses, either, but it’s free of that knock-you-off-your-feet stench that I’ve encountered in other chicken operations.

The Chicken Palace
Cyn Cady

I built the henhouse and run myself, with some help from the Girl Kid, and I admit, it’s a bit … er … funky looking. I will definitely get around to trimming the roof shingles one of these days, and it could use a bit of leveling, but pretty is as pretty does, and not having to bend over is a downright beautiful thing.

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