R. Han wrote:
Samantha Hall wrote:It very well might. They previously had 23 Doves in it and they seemed happy.
Tereza Okava wrote:Chicken/rabbit setup a lá Joel Salatin? (it has a cute name that I can't remember right now-- chickens on the bottom, rabbits on the top). Both could conceivably have ramps going out to enclosed outside yards.
Jay Angler wrote:Samantha Hall wrote:
You may need some cover if your climate is wet, but the tree will give some shade, so I had wondered if replacing the roof with old sliding glass doors to give more light would open up other options. I had not intended to suggest it would be a full-time home as opposed to a day-run for chickens. Even if people free range or create multiple paddocks for chickens, there are often times when you need a little break for those areas, and having this shelter as a known safe spot if you suddenly get a new predator causing trouble, or if you have a broody chicken followed by tiny chicks, or an injured bird that needs a safe place to heal and gain strength, this shelter, with minimal changes, could provide for that.
Stacie Kim wrote:Would quail do well in that setup?
R. Han wrote:In my opinion it is too small for permanent housing of any avian dinosaur.
(I also oppose chicken tractors, paul has a presentation on why)
Depending on your context it could be excellent shelter for some reptiles of your choice.
So if you fancy some exotics it could be their summer residence.
I Personally would put some big ass rocks in there to create shelter for native reptiles,
because in there they are safe from cats and can warm up before they go hunting.
So you help possibly engadered species plus you get free pest control.
edit: of course the reptile thing depends also on sun exposure, you didn't give any info about that.
If you do the reptile thing, consider also putting rocks/boulders around the structure in a suntrap fashion.