- Thread starter
- #21
Thank you for the heads up. What a scary situation, but luckily you found the cause.
It does make you wonder about how much builds up in our own bodies...
Maybe there is a way to have a stainless steel container within an isolating cover.
Yes, it does make you wonder! There's no harm in avoiding it, huh?

Re: the chicken waterer, for us (wanting to offer water outdoors, not just in the coop since the chickens much prefer to be outside) we have to contend with a lot of cold and wind. So the watering solution can't exacerbate frostbite. This pretty much forbids all open waterers; we have opted for horizontal chicken nipples in all waterers. There's just not a good way to install those on metal with any hope that they won't ice over on the inside pretty quickly.
We have an outdoor "lean-to" the chickens hang out in most of the day. It provides a very good windbreak and lets the sun shine in. The outdoor waterer lives in there. Today it has been 20 deg F and quite windy all morning/day. The 1 gal HDPE waterer with nipples stayed usable for six hours before needing to be de-iced. I can't imagine a metal one working for longer than an hour (if that!) under those conditions. And on those days where the high never gets above zero F? Sometimes the plastic waterer is usable for only 30-60 minutes. We just could not manage an metal waterer and I do not want to employ a hassle like a heater just to avoid the use of one (very convenient!) plastic bottle
