I ran out of chicken feeders recently and had an ah-ha! moment that led me to create feeders from recycled plastic bottles. For a variety of reasons including frostbite, quarantine, feather picking injuries and brooding new baby chicks, I have had a basement full of chickens in rabbit cages, dog kennels and pet carriers for months.
As a result of the growing basement census, I found myself short on traditional chick feeders and while cleaning pine shavings out of the brooder feeder and filling the poultry nipple waterer, inspiration struck. If soda bottles could be hung as waterers, why not as feeders? I figured the chickens wouldn’t be able to kick bedding into them or poop in them as easily and they’d free up floor space too. Bonus! It took me 3 minutes to make two chicken feeders from one bottle and I’m going to show you how!
So, here are the ‘before’ pictures of the temporary basement residents:
Bertha, the Partridge Cochin we bought at the in January was in quarantine.
Thelma & Louise, Dark Cornish pullets shared quarantine space next to Bertha.
Blaze (Black Copper Marans rooster) has been in the infirmary while his frostbitten comb healed. Calista Flockheart & Ally McBeak (Tolbunt Polish Frizzle hens) shared the dog kennel with Blaze for a couple of weeks due to cabin-fever induced feather picking of their crests by flock members.
Thelma, Louise and Bertha graduated to the dog kennel in the chicken coop during the integration period. I wish I had a nickel for every time they knocked over their feeder.
Ready to build a chicken feeder with me? Blink and you’ll miss it!
MATERIALS
- a clean, plastic bottle with cap (water, soda, juice, etc.)
- utility shears or serrated knife
- paper punch wire for hanging
(I recommend wire, not the string shown as string could be untied and eaten)
Using utility shears or a serrated knife, cut a clean plastic bottle in half. Smooth out any rough or sharp edges with shears. For chicks, it’s best to cut each half even shorter so that they can reach the feed at the bottom of the bottle. If the edge is sharp, file it down or use a flame (lighter, candle) to warm & melt the raw edge slightly to dull the sharp edge.
With paper punch, punch holes along the top edge of each bottle.
Cut a U-shaped notch in the front of the feeder.
Thread wire through two of the holes and hang the feeder at back-height of the chicken(s). Easy peasy, right?
I cut the bottle feeder shorter than shown so the chicks could reach the feed at the bottom. I have several feeders hung in the brooder to allow everyone who’d like to eat at the same time that opportunity.
Kathy Shea Mormino
Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on
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I ran out of chicken feeders recently and had an ah-ha! moment that led me to create feeders from recycled plastic bottles. For a variety of reasons including frostbite, quarantine, feather picking injuries and brooding new baby chicks, I have had a basement full of chickens in rabbit cages, dog kennels and pet carriers for months.
As a result of the growing basement census, I found myself short on traditional chick feeders and while cleaning pine shavings out of the brooder feeder and filling the poultry nipple waterer, inspiration struck. If soda bottles could be hung as waterers, why not as feeders? I figured the chickens wouldn’t be able to kick bedding into them or poop in them as easily and they’d free up floor space too. Bonus! It took me 3 minutes to make two chicken feeders from one bottle and I’m going to show you how!
So, here are the ‘before’ pictures of the temporary basement residents:
Bertha, the Partridge Cochin we bought at the in January was in quarantine.
Thelma & Louise, Dark Cornish pullets shared quarantine space next to Bertha.
Blaze (Black Copper Marans rooster) has been in the infirmary while his frostbitten comb healed. Calista Flockheart & Ally McBeak (Tolbunt Polish Frizzle hens) shared the dog kennel with Blaze for a couple of weeks due to cabin-fever induced feather picking of their crests by flock members.
Thelma, Louise and Bertha graduated to the dog kennel in the chicken coop during the integration period. I wish I had a nickel for every time they knocked over their feeder.
Ready to build a chicken feeder with me? Blink and you’ll miss it!
MATERIALS
- a clean, plastic bottle with cap (water, soda, juice, etc.)
- utility shears or serrated knife
- paper punch wire for hanging
(I recommend wire, not the string shown as string could be untied and eaten)
Using utility shears or a serrated knife, cut a clean plastic bottle in half. Smooth out any rough or sharp edges with shears. For chicks, it’s best to cut each half even shorter so that they can reach the feed at the bottom of the bottle. If the edge is sharp, file it down or use a flame (lighter, candle) to warm & melt the raw edge slightly to dull the sharp edge.
With paper punch, punch holes along the top edge of each bottle.
Cut a U-shaped notch in the front of the feeder.
Thread wire through two of the holes and hang the feeder at back-height of the chicken(s). Easy peasy, right?
I cut the bottle feeder shorter than shown so the chicks could reach the feed at the bottom. I have several feeders hung in the brooder to allow everyone who’d like to eat at the same time that opportunity.
OMG that is brilliant. I have some of the brooder bottle caps and haven't quite figured out how to mount them yet.
I would love to win this! Thanks for the opportunity! I love that feeder! I need to make some!
Awesome! We have a huge surplus of plastic zip ties that would work well for this. Thanks for the tip!
I love this idea and will be using it too. I'm going to try using a cranberry juice bottle. :) Love your blog and all the information you give. Keep up the good work.
That is smart! Are they able to get a majority of the feed from it? Also, when you use the cardboard chick condo as a brooder with a nipple waterer, how do you deal with the water that drips from them?
I have sand bedding in my box condo, and my chicks loved the nipple waterer, but it soaked the box. I put back the traditional style waterer on a chunk of wood, but hate the lost space.