- Apr 18, 2014
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Hi, I'm looking into some artificial coop lighting for my girls this upcoming fall and winter. I live way up north in NW Minnesota about 60 miles from the Canadian border and will , by mid January , only have 8 hours of full reasonably natural daylight in my coop at most. I'm looking into timers etc. My coop is an old milk house attached to the barn so it is well insulated, concrete floor with a floor drain. It has full power, but only has two smaller windows facing west. This gets me a little more daylight coming in towards the evening but as the sun sets a bit more SW in the winter and the fact that little to no sunlight draws in until after 8-9 am as the barn blocks the east sunrise I'm going to have very minimal and inconsistent natural daylight.
Here is my concern. I can put in timers on the lighting the milk house to try to keep a consistent 12-14 hours of daylight or artificial daylight per say but it seems a little nutty to go from pitch black to bright light in a flash. I have not found any timers that double as gradual timers however I have found WIFI capable, gradual timers that I can actually regulate from in the house from my ipad. These however only work with LED lighting.
Does anyone have any experience with using LED lighting in coops versus traditional light bulbs and how does it effect fooling the chickens? The nice thing about this technology is that is is designed for aquariums to mimic sunrise and sunsets through graduation. Surprisingly it is fairly inexpensive. Am I crazy for thinking ( or over thinking) this?
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
Here is my concern. I can put in timers on the lighting the milk house to try to keep a consistent 12-14 hours of daylight or artificial daylight per say but it seems a little nutty to go from pitch black to bright light in a flash. I have not found any timers that double as gradual timers however I have found WIFI capable, gradual timers that I can actually regulate from in the house from my ipad. These however only work with LED lighting.
Does anyone have any experience with using LED lighting in coops versus traditional light bulbs and how does it effect fooling the chickens? The nice thing about this technology is that is is designed for aquariums to mimic sunrise and sunsets through graduation. Surprisingly it is fairly inexpensive. Am I crazy for thinking ( or over thinking) this?
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
