A Mobile Home for Chickens

Houdan ChicksMy fascination with unusual chickens started at a young age. When I was nine I entered a trio of Silkie bantams in a show at the Warren County Fair. Silkies are pretty fancy looking birds. They are covered in downy feathers with a head crest and feathers around their ankles and toes, as if they are wearing a fur coat, cap and boots.

Since then I've raised a variety of birds some that I've given names including Slim, a Modern Game bantam; Jackie and Elroy, a pair of Barred Plymouth Rock bantams; Mottled Cochin bantams and French Porcelains.

Because space is limited in my urban home garden I've found the smaller bantam breeds to be the ideal size. However, the roominess of the Garden Home Retreat has made it possible to select some large birds like the colossal black Jersey Giant. First developed in the 1870s, they are still the largest American breed. Roosters can weigh up to 13 pounds and hens as much as 10 pounds. The chicks that I have are only a few weeks old and they are already as big as crows.

The second type of chicken I've selected is a French variety called Houdan. Like the Silkies, it's a flashy breed with a feathery head crest and muff around the neck. They also have 5 toes.

Old TrailorSome friends of mine have been kind enough to keep the chicks for me until I'm ready to move them to the Garden Home Retreat. The construction of their new house is underway and its going to be something special. After years of checking out all the amazing houses people provide for their chickens, I knew exactly what I wanted to build – a portable chicken tractor. It is designed to protect the chickens from predators while giving them free range to graze on fresh grass. I took an old trailer frame and had it straightened and strengthened by a local welder. Then I stopped by to talk to a talented local woodworker I know and sketched out a design on a napkin. He took the plan and constructed a house on top of the trailer. Once finished, it was stained in the same colors as the other outbuildings. A portable electric fence is strung around the area to protect the birds. As the birds graze in an area and need fresh pasture, the entire house can be moved and the fence repositioned.


Back View

Side View

Cut Away Interior View



If you want to try your hand at raising chickens, spring is a great time to purchase chicks. For the best success, I recommend that you find a local breeder. You can do this by checking out the publication The Poultry Press or your local cooperative extension. For poultry raising supplies, nothing beats Stromberg's. I have been purchasing material from them since I entered my first competition with 3 white Silkie bantams.

I also recommend that you purchase a copy of A Guide to Raising Chickens by Gail Damerow. It is an excellent book that will help you learn how to raise chickens successfully, and before you know it you will be sharing chicken stories of your own!

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Comments

portable chicken coop

by joyce poelsma on April 2, 2010 05:39
I am moving to the county in a few months and saw your portable coop on the tv show, I would like to build one. Are ther plans available? On your web site ? Or else where. Thank you, Joyce

replies

by Leanne Harvey on March 29, 2010 12:47
I would love to see your replies to questions that others have sent to you, how to I see them?

Portable turkey house

by Jennifer Lightfoot on February 17, 2010 07:18
In one of your recent shows you had a mobile turkey house on skids. Please send me the link of the plans you discussed on your show. I have been searching on your website and internet to find more information. Thank you...

mobile chicken coop

by penny on November 22, 2009 03:43
i reciently saw your show when you had the mobile coop on and i am very interested in making one and need more pictures and detail plans on how to make the coop

Finished Chicken House

by Laura Lynn on April 12, 2009 09:00
My daughter saw your show Sat. before Easter and tried to explain the detail of your mobile chicken house. Is there any way to see a picture of this house with the details from both sides?

barn colors at garden home

by Catherine Atchison on February 28, 2009 02:47
I have been trying to figure out what colors to paint my new milk barn for months. When I saw your barns on your PBS show I fell in love. Can you please tell me what colors and brands of paint you used for your barns. Thanks so much.

CHICKEN HOUSE

by VIRGINIA SMITH on July 8, 2008 07:46
WOULD YOU PLACE PICTURE OF THE FINISHED CHICKEN HOUSE- AND EXACT MEASUREMENTS

Chicken House

by Tamara on June 23, 2008 08:06
I live in the city, in a 4-plex townhome, with only a deck to garden on. Chickens are legal here in the city (I don't think that roosters are), but after I saw your chicken house on wheels, I sketched one up for my own records JUST IN CASE I run into that perfect piece of acreage that I can't pass up. I didn't know that you would share your blueprint. Thanks!

Raising Chickens

by Shawnne on June 7, 2008 08:55
Hi Allen! I love your article concerning raising chickens. In the 1980's, my family raised some regular chickens for eggs. What a difference from the store-bought ones! I live in a rural setting now with 3 acres and would love to raise some more exotic chickens, such as some you have listed in your article. I am hoping the funds will become available so I can accomplish this. I would definitely need something covered/protected. We have a variety of wildlife as well as raptors who would love to eat chickens. Thanks for your inspiring article!

chickens

by Marian Wright on May 17, 2008 09:00
I enjoyed you article on raising chickens. My dad raised them when we were growing up. Dad raised games because he fought chickens. I'm not saying it was right, but he was raised to train them to fight from a very young child. After I married dad gave me some and I didn't care too much for them even though they were beautiful, because after a rain when the cocks were a certain age they began fighting each other all over the yard. I wonder if any of your readers know why they would fight each other even when they weren't trained to. I changed and started raising the hens that layed colored eggs. I just raised them for the eggs and I was facinated by the different colored eggs. I don't have chickens any more, however, I love eggs from hens that run loose. The yellows are so rich and golden. I guess it is because they eat grass and bug and etc. They are quite different from the eggs that you buy from the store.

the location of yourfarm home/state

by Peter Schantz on May 10, 2008 06:36
Paul every Sat.morning along with my wife and two pouches we gather in front of our T.V. and enjoy your program it is a welcome escape from the gardener unfriendly climate of Phoenix,being a transplanted easterner. I miss the four seasons and the rain which we are required to wait months for. I am always trying to guess where your garden home is I'm sure it's in the east but I can't guess where I know it is somewhere I would enjoy being even in the winter. Peter Schantz Phoenix,AZ

chickens

by Judy Wilkins on March 23, 2008 08:40
I love your chickens.

Re: A Mobile Home for Chickens

by JoAnn on February 28, 2008 09:47
I love raising chickens and other poultry, especially geese. But, we are retired and travel some over the summer, which is when I'd like to raise some broilers. I love your house on wheels idea- - but where we live there are a lot of hawks and owls that love chicken. This design needs a covered pen of some sort so the chickens can 'graze' yet be protected from above. I think my chicken days are behind me-- but I have dreampt of a covered pen for years. Maybe when I'm OLD! I'm only 71 now!

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