Eden Project chicken coops

by Nik on January 21, 2010

in Keeping chickens

Eden Project shop selling recycled chicken coops

We love our Omlet Eglu Cube, and so do our chickens. It’s easy to maintain, easy to clean, and looks great. We chose it precisely because it is a low maintenance way to raise hens, and because nobody offered anything like it.

Until now.

The Eden Project has started selling a range of self-sufficiency products through its online shop, including a couple of plastic chicken houses. They come in two sizes – small, for two birds and medium for four – and their biggest plus-point is their environmental credentials: they’re recycled.

Entirely.

The plastic shells are the melted down and reformed remains of old computers, food containers and so on and, because of plastic’s epoch-defining longevity, should last… well, a lifetime.

The only thing that puts us off is the look. To our eyes they’re more than a little like a rolling-lid communal bin you might find behind a block of flats.

If you can get past the looks, though, they’re a cheap introduction to chicken keeping, with the cheapest two-hen model undercutting Omlet’s entry level ‘Go’ by around £70.

The medium house, which will provide a home for four hens (and is thus more directly comparable to the Go), costs £279 plus £12 delivery. None of those prices include the optional £99 run, though, which to our mind is essential for the safety of your hens.

 
Omlet Go
Eden Medium
 Cost including run
£295
£378
 Delivery
£15.66
£12
 Total
£310.66
£390

* Delivery charges quoted are to our local area – Essex.

The Eden Project hen houses have clever rotating openings on the sides to let you regulate the ventilation, which is a feature missing from the Eglu Cube, where the vents are a fixed part of the moulding. They also have a ramp for entering and leaving the coop, in contrast to the Cube’s ladder, which even after 18 months of living in it still causes our hens some concern.

So, is it worth foregoing the looks and paying a little more for an environmentally conscious option? The answer is probably yes, and we’d love to try one out to see how it stacks up against the market leader.

We do love our Eglu, though.

Related posts:

  1. Your chicken-keeping questions answered
  2. How cosy is a chicken coop?
  3. Popular Blagger posts of January 2010
  4. The chicken bomb in our garden
  5. New chicken compound



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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Pat January 21, 2010 at 2:44 pm

It reminds me of Baba Yaga’s hut. But that may be because I was just reading a comic where the hut featured prominently. Those adjustable vents sound cool.

I also have a Eglu Cube, and am familiar with the ladder issues. I cut a piece of plastic fencing and wire-tied it over the rungs. This seems to make the chickens much happier – they don’t have to jump from rung to rung. I don’t know if you have the same sort of stuff in the UK – it’s 1 inch mesh, about 3 feet high, made of flexible plastic and comes on a roll. I think it was called garden fencing or something like that.

2 Nik January 26, 2010 at 12:30 pm

Great tip, Pat. Thanks. I considered putting a plank of wood under my Eglu ladder so that the chickens’ feet wouldn’t slip through but haven’t yet quite worked out how to secure it. Perhaps I’ll try your fencing idea and some tying on. Often the simple answers are the best.

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