Sunday, 27 May 2012

Build Your Own Chicken Coop.


"Discover How To Easily BuildAn Attractive And AffordableBackyard Chicken Coop..."

Building your own chicken coop will be one of the best decisions you'll make in your life.
   Your own backyard chicken coop will provide you with daily fresh organic eggs for the kitchen. It will recycle your families food scraps and produce high quality fertilizer for your garden. Best of all, your family will be proud of the coop that you created with you own two hands.
   It just makes perfect economic sense to build a chicken coop yourself instead of buying an expensive pre-built chicken coops. Pre-built coops have to be assembled anyway, you're really just paying hugely inflated prices for the material.
   I understand that building chicken coop can seem like a hard project. Working out dimensions,  materials, insulation, ventilation, lighting, positioning, nesting, perches, waste collection and protection from the elements and other predators can seem complicated.
   Luckily for you, using my many years of experience in the poultryindustry, I've created an easy to follow guide to building your ownbackyard chicken coop.  It's designed it for the total beginner, you don't require any carpentry skills. It doesn't matter if you want a big coop or a small coop, or if have a big or a little budget.

Introducing "Building A Chicken Coop"...



No special tools required - I designed these plans specifically for the total total beginner. You wont require anything but the most simple of tools Easy To Build Plans - Includes color step-by-step plans with scale diagrams and dimensions that even a child could follow Save Money - On average our users save about 50% over buying their own coop. That adds up to hundreds (sometime thousands) of dollars Print As Needed - My downloadable format allows you to print of as many copies as you need in case your lose or dirty a copy, or if you require multiple copies for those helping you..

CLICK HERE TO DISCOVER MORE...



Good Designs for Chicken Coops Make All The Difference by: Steve Hales

Gone are the days of chicken coops being just a simple shed with tar paper as insulation with rickety doors and windows. These days’ designs for chicken coops perpetuate solid, well-built, highly functional coops that look great and last a long time.

I remember the first time I saw a “modern” chicken coop, I was at a friend’s house and he wanted to take me out to see his chickens. I was stunned at how good the coop looked and how well designed it was.

I had raised chickens a long time before and I really didn’t have any good memories about it. The coop I used was there when I bought the house and I guess if I knew how bad the coop was I would have done something about it.

If there wasn’t a skunk or raccoon killing one of my chickens they were dying from the cold. And believe me I tried to fortify the coop, but there were some “secret passages” that I just could find until I gave up on raising chickens and finally tore the building down.

Now the attitude about raising chickens has changed and more emphasis is being placed on the quality of the birds housing. Chickens are fairly self-sustaining if they are given what they need. So to have a successful flock the focus should be, as it is now, on the environment you provide them.

A solid foundation with quality materials like treated lumber help to ensure the coop will keep its integrity and be just as solid as it is now, twenty years from now.

Today chicken coop designs take into account such things as good lighting, ventilation, spacious layouts, and weather tight construction so that you should expect to be able to have a healthy and productive flock.

I’ve been back in the chicken raising fold for over ten years now and with my new modern chicken coop and run and I couldn’t be happier about how things have gone. Because of the great lighting, both natural and artificial, my hens are egg laying machines!

I haven’t had one issue with a predator and I can’t see that I ever will as long as I keep the coop up – which really doesn’t take much with the quality of the construction.

I have the option to add more birds whenever I’m ready for them since my coop is very spacious and can keep up to twenty hens and roosters. Plus I’m able to take advantage of the chicken produced fertilizer and my vegetable garden and my wife’s flowers are reaping the benefits big time!

If you are on the fence about whether or not to raise chickens just let me say that you can’t go wrong if you’ll take your time to find a design that you like and will work for the number of birds you want to keep.

The benefits far outweigh and negatives you may thinking of that would keep you from taking the next step toward fresh eggs, meat and a small level of self-reliance.


About The Author
Steve Hales is an expert at building chicken coops and raising chickens for eggs, meat and a little self reliance.

If you want to know more about designs for chicken coops then go check out my website http://www.chickencoopscentral.com, there you'll find more information about a variety of coops on what you need to know before you start building your chicken coop.
The author invites you to visit:
http://www.chickencoopscentral.com

British miss pets more than family

 

 

Survey: British miss pets more than family

"CHESTER, England, May 26 (UPI) -- One-third of British pet owners said they would rather go away with their pet on vacation than their immediate family, a survey indicated. British pet owners surveyed by travel comparison Web site TravelSupermarket ..."
http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2012/05/26/Survey-British-miss-pets-more-than-family/UPI-68301338085880/