Thin material to cover insulation?

GardenChickens

In the Brooder
May 9, 2015
53
4
48
Hey!

Our coop is insulated with pink styrofoam sheets and the walls are covered with thin wooden boards but there are some areas around the door and the sides of the door that are not covered. Unfortunaely the chickens love to eat it so I need some way to cover it. I need a very thin material, otherwise the door won't close which will also look halfway decent. Any ideas?

Thanks
 
The problem is, in cold climates, sealing up a coop to make it airtight is a really bad idea. Ventilation is critical in cold climates for preventing frostbite. And if you have enough ventilation, than the coop won't really be much warmer inside than the outside temp. If you are trying to hold in heat, you will also be holding in ammonia and moisture, both of which can be deadly to your flock.
 
1/8 plywood works well. Super cheap and durable enough to stop pecking through.
It's thin enough you can score it with an utility knife or easily use a small hand saw.

Another thing people use is old feed bags. If you have enough feed bags, it wont cost you anything.
 
I need a very thin material, otherwise the door won't close which will also look halfway decent. Any ideas?

Thanks
I covered my Styrofoam with the veneer from interior doors I purchased from Habitat for Humanity. Ran them through my table saw to separate them from the frame and Easy Peasy from there. Insulating a coop I know is not necessary unless you have a metal building (my coop is insulated). Regardless I find the insulation goes along way to keep your birds cooler in the summer.

This is my answer to ventilation. It seems to respond to every variety of situation. I will be changing the left hand door to a dutch door to give me even more options in the winter when ventilation is even more vital. My coop is only 4x8 and I keep as many as 24 Golden Comets with no issues (3 levels) They do not use the run during the winter.





 
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Thank you everyone for your help! I understand now insulation might not have been necessary-I do have adequate ventilaton so it might be pointless but the covered insulation doesnt hurt and the extra wall provides stability to the coop. Thanks again, I'll see what I can do
 
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Why do you have your coop insulated? If you're coop has enough ventilation, then insulation is kind of pointless.

It gets really cold here and insulating the coop was suggested to me by many. I'm not going to take it down...and that wasn't the question I was asking.
Thanks for your time anyway
 
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"Linoleum" countertop material? Sheet metal? I assume it needs to be thin but strong enough they won't peck it apart.
Linoleum could work.. I might try that. Would I just glue it down though? I don't know about the sheet metal because I'm not sure how I would cut it, I'm assuming a regular saw wouldn't do it?
 
Whoever told you to use insulation gave you bad advice. The only insulation I would ever consider using would be under a metal roof (if I had one) to prevent condensation. Otherwise, insulation is not needed. What birds need to stay warm is to stay dry and that means a lot of ventilation to vent the moist air they themselves create and that means a high turnover with fresh outside air. The insulation / ventilation issue is counter-intuitive, so is a common mistake a lot of coop builders make.

But you already have it and so need to button it up to keep them from pecking at it, which is almost universal where it exists and is exposed. Is this something trim boards of the type used around doors and windows can cover? This could be any old type of board or even plywood, it's the concept of being like a trim board I'm thinking of. If not, and this is a different issue, there could be a lot of options to help, but I'm having trouble visualizing what you are describing.

Any chance you could post a photo of where this is taking place?
 

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