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Coop Training Your Chickens
Prepare your chicken coop. Before you can train your chickens to return to the coop in the evening, you need to ensure the coop is set up properly for your chickens. A basic chicken coop should provide at least twenty-four square feet of space and multiple places for chickens to perch. Make sure there is a plentiful supply of food and water inside the chicken coop. Wood beams mounted horizontally can provide good perching space for chickens. If you are raising chickens for egg production, make sure there are enough chicken nesting boxes for each hen (usually one box per four hens will suffice).
Check the temperature inside the coop. Coop training requires that you keep your chickens inside the coop for a prolonged period of time. It’s important that you make sure your chickens won’t be too hot or they could suffer from health issues. Your chicken coop should not exceed 70 degrees Fahrenheit during coop training. Install fans to reduce the temperature of your coop if it is too hot. You may want to consider relocating your chicken coop to a shadier area of your yard if high temperatures continue to be an issue.
Keep your chickens confined to the coop for a week. Chickens are often stressed by a transition from one coop or yard to another. Young chickens that are transitioning into living in a coop may take even longer to adjust. Forcing the chickens to remain inside the coop for a week will force them to roost in the coop and begin to consider it a home. Make sure your coop allows you to easily replace food and water dishes without allowing the chickens to escape the coop. Most coops have small doors designed specifically for this purpose. The bedding at the bottom of the coop will be very messy after a week, so make sure to remove soiled bedding at the completion of the week.
Allow the chickens to leave the coop after a week. After a week, open the door to the coop and allow the chickens to wander out into your yard or the area you have fenced in for them. Try not to interfere with them and instead allow them to wander freely. If the chickens do not return to the coop at dusk, it means they have not properly adjusted to it. You may have to confine the chickens to the coop for another week in order to ensure they accept it as their home and a safe area. Once the chickens have adjusted to the coop as their new home, they will return to it naturally when they sense danger, want to rest, or at sundown each day.
Training Your Chickens to Come When You Call
Choose one consistent sound as your call. Chickens are not as skilled at interpreting human sounds as dogs are, so it’s important that you choose one distinct sound as your chicken call. Using a consistent sound of any sort may work, but by using a tool instead of your voice, others can call the chickens for you if you aren’t present to call them. A whistle or bell are both excellent options to use as a chicken call. You could also try banging a bowl or cup on the side of the coop. If you choose to use your voice, make sure it is a distinct sound that you do not make regularly when not calling your chickens.
Use treats to train your chickens. You will need to train your chickens to associate the sound of your chicken call with getting a treat in order to get them to come whenever you call. Choose a treat that your chickens do not normally eat otherwise they may grow tired of the treat. Bird seed mixed with meal worms serves as an excellent treat that you can spread around inside the coop each time you sound the chicken call. Watermelon wedges also serve as good chicken treats, but because they are hard to scatter the less dominant chickens may not be able to get to the treats.
Let the chickens see you with the treats. As you train your chickens to respond to your chicken call, make sure they can see the bag or box of treats as you approach and make the sound. Your chickens do not necessarily need to see the treats for the training to work, but it will often go faster if they see the treats during the early stages of training. Let the chickens see you approach their coop with the treats as you prepare to sound your chicken call. Chickens will come to associate your behavior with getting treats as well as the call itself.
Use your chicken call and toss treats into the coop. By scattering treats into the coop while you use your chicken call, you will help the chickens begin to associate the sound with both treats and returning to their coop. Repeat this process two to three times per day for about a week to establish the pattern in the chicken’s minds. If your chickens aren’t interested in the treats you are using, try switching to bits of corn.
Be patient. Your chickens may not understand the process quickly. You may need to sound the chicken call and make sure they see you distributing the feed a number of times before they start to understand. Early on, the noise will not attract chickens, only the smell and sight of the treats will. Once one chicken figures out the process, it will begin to respond more quickly. Other chickens will follow suit soon after to ensure they get a share of the treats. Chickens are less likely to respond to this training if they have eaten recently or have only left the coop a short time ago.
Start concealing the treats when you call your chickens. Once your chickens are starting to respond well to the chicken call, start approaching the coop without keeping the treats visible. Once you sound the call, remove the treats from where you’ve hidden them and distribute them like normal. Hiding the treats will help ensure the chickens respond to the call and not the visual que of the treats. If your chickens become accustomed to coming without seeing treats, that is one step closer to simply coming when they’re called. Continue to repeat this process until the chickens return to the coop reliably each time they are called.
Retraining Your Chickens After a Scare
Identify the source of the stressor in the coop. Sometimes chickens that have been coop trained will vacate their coop and refuse to re-enter it. This is often caused by a predator entering the coop or the conditions in the coop being unhealthy for the chickens. Look for any areas that a predator could have gained access to the coop and secure it. Ensure the coop is relatively clean and the food and water are easy to access. Also check the temperature to make sure it is not exceeding 70 degrees Fahrenheit. The stressor that caused the chickens to leave must be identified and resolved prior to retraining your chickens to return to the coop.
Catch your chickens. Once you have made sure the coop is safe for your chickens, you will need to catch or corral them all back into the coop. If your chickens are able to walk around a large yard, it may be difficult to catch them all. Try approaching sleeping chickens at night slowly with a flashlight. Don’t shine the light directly on the chickens as it may wake them. Once you’re close, gently pick each chicken up and return it to the coop. Use food to distract a chicken during the day, then approach it slowly from behind. Once you are close enough, gently pick the chicken up and return it to its coop.
Confine your chickens to the coop for a week. Once all of the chickens are back in the coop, secure the coop and keep the chickens confined to it for a week. This will re-establish the coop as their safe haven and home in the minds of the chickens. Release the chickens again after a week. If they do not return to the coop that night, check the conditions of the coop again to make sure the water and food can be reached by all chickens and the temperature is below seventy degrees. Secure the chickens for a second week if they do not begin returning to the coop at dusk and the coop is in good condition.
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