Thanks!

I would definitely build my own coop; that would be a big part of the initial fun for me.

Chicago suburbs so def have winters to plan around.

I would probably want to run power to it to have a webcam in there, maybe a programmable door. Would also simplify preventing water from freezing. It is cool that some basic shelter plus their feathers are enough for them to survive in the cold.

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Yeah, here in Mo, most people with south facing coops blocking our north prevailing winds do better than air tight coops. Running power would be clutch, the water heaters are usually just little metal stands that keep the water container you set above it from freezing. Also, tractor supply is a shit coin so avoid most of their products, metal stuff beats plastic in this application

How long do you think I could be away from home if there's no one around to help out?

And separate from that, I do have helpful neighbors, but not sure how willing they'll be to really get in there while I'm on a trip. How big of an ask would it be if I'll be gone for a couple of weeks? Meaning: how much effort / unpleasantness and how often?

A week is doable if you don't have a lot of predators and can keep the door open, otherwise daily door opening. If you get that figured out, then weekly water and feed is easy to establish, can even go longer with trash can/55 gallon drums for feed and water. If you do those, then it's just eggs which you can collect when you're back

There's definitely a fox that shows up from time to time in the backyard. That's the only daytime concern. Later night visits from neighborhood cat (maybe a threat to chickens?), skunks (no), opossum (no). Raccoons (?), too, but haven't seen any in a while.

Sounds like for longer trips I'd hopefully recruit a more willing / outdoorsy neighbor for at least a weekly check in and all the free eggs they care to take!