- Feb 6, 2011
- 18
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So we live way down South of Houston, so it's hot as ___ in the summer and we only freeze a handful of nights a year. We're turning one end of a shed into a coop, and I'm worried about giving them adequate ventilation in the stifling heat and humidity we get down here. Before I'd spent much time on this forum I had DH cut some round "port holes" at roost level because I thought they'd like to look outside, but now I'm reading that the vents need to be above roost level. So, allow me to be a bit more descriptive.
The space is 8'x6' and 10' high. One wall already has 3" gaps running under the roof's overhang that we will screen over with hardware cloth. I can extend these as much as we need to, but I'm worried about rain getting in if we make it too big. Two other walls are solid. The fourth wall, the one we have only half built, is going to have a screen door that we picked up on the cheap, reinforced with hardware cloth. Should we finish out that wall with screen so it's essentially open air? Should we plug up the port holes that are at roost level? Should we increase the high-up ventilation under the eave?
Thanks so much for your help, y'all!
-Hillary
The space is 8'x6' and 10' high. One wall already has 3" gaps running under the roof's overhang that we will screen over with hardware cloth. I can extend these as much as we need to, but I'm worried about rain getting in if we make it too big. Two other walls are solid. The fourth wall, the one we have only half built, is going to have a screen door that we picked up on the cheap, reinforced with hardware cloth. Should we finish out that wall with screen so it's essentially open air? Should we plug up the port holes that are at roost level? Should we increase the high-up ventilation under the eave?
Thanks so much for your help, y'all!
-Hillary