I have told a few people I would post the results of my research about "chicken tractors" and what the final product looks like. Many, many thanks go to several people and a great friend who helped me brainstorm and assemble. Without his help and "push", this would have still been on the drawing board.
A special thanks goes to Patrice. She LOVES chickens and was a wealth of knowledge, help and inspiration. Hats off to you Patrice.
Here we go.

This is the finished product. My daughter's chickens are golden buffs (sex link). They are a RIW male and RIR female cross. 4 lb adults with 250 eggs/year.
The frame is 2 inch angle in a 8' X 8"5" box. The door is the same angle framed in and welded with hinges welded on. The door "knobs" are quick links installed through holes drilled in the door and door frame. The coop hoop is 2 panels of livestock panel bought from tractor supply. The entire coop is covered over with chicken wire zip tied in place at all cross points and where else needed. It took about 800. No kidding.
The front and back were welded on with another 2 pieces of livestock panel cut to fit.
It was then covered with a tarp. I had to use a rather large tarp to cover it down to about 1 foot off the ground for cover and to allow for air flow.

This is the reinforcing angle at each corner.
This is a 5/8" bolt welded on as an axle for the wheels that are put on the back when the coop is moved. Ensure your wheels have a 5/8" arbor.

These are the wheels I use. Bought at Harbor Freight.

This is the tongue welded onto the front of the coop for the dolly used to lift the front of the coop to roll the tractor.


This is the wheel mounted to the axle and how it fits.



This is the nest box bought from craigslist from a chicken house operation being upgraded. Got it for $10. Mounted 1/2" treated plywood to the back of it and mounted it to the coop frame with stainless S hooks.



This is the fence. It is a solar charger grounded to the coop. The fence is stood off the coop via 2 ft sections of rebar welded to the frame and installed on plastic, electric fence standoffs. You can touch the coop, no problem. You can touch the fence and get a tickle. Touch both and you get 5500 yellow jackets pounding your hand. It is four strand with the top two strands having a disconnect on opposite sides at the door to minimize a possible ladder for "ricky" or "opie".
We move the coop about every three days. This gives the chickens fresh bugs, grass and weeds and cleans and fertilizes the yard 8 sq feet at a time. It's pretty neat and the chickens are very content. Five chicken and we are getting 4-5 eggs/day. I never knew they were so social. Neat animals.
I know it looks like overkill but I wanted to do something that will keep my daughter from crying when she finds one of her chickens dead. I know it looks heavy, but it's really not that bad.
I am up for any critique to make this a better coop so if you see an improvement that can be made, please sound off.
Here's some pics of the ladies and their food and water dispenser. I drilled a 1/8" hole on the top of the water bowl to hang it from the inside of the coop. I hung the feeder and waterer with fence wire. It's been great for my daughter as she has to get up at 5:45 every morning to take care of HER chickens. I told her when we got them it was up to her whether they live or die. She has really taken ownership of her livestock and I am proud of her. We are feeding them a mix of laying mash, starter (leftover) and a dash of oyster shell.
We have raised them from chicks. We bought them April 5th. I suggested buying five as I figured one would die. Well, with the way she takes care of them, that didn't happen. I'm glad now. I've been eating lots of eggs. I LOVE hen fruit.
Hope you enjoyed and I hope this helps someone else. If you have questions, feel free to pm me.



