Jumping the Moon Dairy - the next chapter

misfitmorgan

Herd Master
Joined
Feb 26, 2016
Messages
3,726
Reaction score
6,998
Points
423
Location
Northern Lower Michigan
Here all pole barns are built without decking, they simply lay purlins across the top of the rafters.

Like this
upload_2017-7-21_7-25-49.png
 

babsbag

Herd Master
Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
7,886
Reaction score
9,317
Points
593
Location
Anderson, CA
0a4870e34c15044cd27289ad1921c6ac--dog-area-metal-fences.jpg


cdd5b4587a47ca9069df6414d00209da.jpg


A roof built like these. The ones with the dog houses is pretty close to what I want to do. I would put gates across the front where I can get in and also hang the feeders. The runs would get wider as they get farther into the pasture. I would do a 4x4 post just like that, every other corner. Use 2x6's for roofing members and Simpson ties to attach the 2x6's to the 4x4's. We do 5' spans with the metal all of the time, even the commercial people build with 5' spans. They make special screws for attaching the metal to metal with no underlayment, they call them stitching screws, so there doesn't have to be a support under the horizontal seams.
 

misfitmorgan

Herd Master
Joined
Feb 26, 2016
Messages
3,726
Reaction score
6,998
Points
423
Location
Northern Lower Michigan
I'm trying to figure out what type of dog uses a house that is off the ground that far..... :eek:

No snow means you can built it light, here we always have to build with a 70lb snow load....according to home inspectors anyhow.
 

babsbag

Herd Master
Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
7,886
Reaction score
9,317
Points
593
Location
Anderson, CA
The houses are pretty curious.

My home is only built to a 30 lb (HUD) and I think our garage is 20 lb. We get a few inches of snow now and then, I have never seen more than 4". My entire barn was built this way before I moved it for the dairy. That metal is actually stronger than it looks, we have placed 2x4s and plywood on top of the roof and walked on it...I wouldn't want to dance up there though.
 

Simpleterrier

True BYH Addict
Joined
Nov 20, 2016
Messages
535
Reaction score
1,190
Points
233
Location
North central Ohio
Here we get snow say up to two feet we use 2x4 standing on edge every two to four feet with the metal screwed directly to the 2x4 purlins. I was just giving out ideas on how to spend less time in the air and more time on the ground. I have help build and worked in to many pole barns to count. If there is a will there is a way just gotta think it threw
 

babsbag

Herd Master
Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
7,886
Reaction score
9,317
Points
593
Location
Anderson, CA
I am all about working on the ground and not the air, especially when the ground isn't level. When I built my chicken coop I had to tie off scaffolding to trees and place it on stacks of lumber to make it level. I also used ladders on top of the scaffolding to reach the roof. I guess you could say that I am pretty good at breaking all of the safety rules but it isn't something that I enjoy. I never did get it painted...

upload_2017-7-21_21-3-40.jpeg
 

Devonviolet

Herd Master
Joined
Nov 22, 2014
Messages
3,402
Reaction score
8,170
Points
513
Location
East Texas - Near Sulphur Springs
Looks awesome! But I'm curious . . . it looks really high. Is it 2 stories? I love that you have such large openings for air flow. I would love to do that. But, the problem I can see is rain getting in, making the coop floor soggy.
 

Latest posts

Top