snhchick
Chirping
- Jul 6, 2015
- 72
- 4
- 59
I'll have to check on them the next time they get wet and see if they are really soaked. I'm new to chickens, but I'm used to having horses that mostly need to acclimate to the sometimes severe weather. I don't like to blanket my horses, and I haven't been coddling my chickens. That said, I certainly don't want them to get sick. Guess I still have a lot to learn!We had one very heavy rain day and both our Silkie hens got soaked to the skin - wet+cold wind - not good for Silkie "fur." So I paper towel dried them both and let them dry off walking around the kitchen floor before letting them outside again. If they get a little fur wet it's ok but wet to the skin is taking a big chance. I have one Silkie with CRD issues so I don't let her condition get a hold and monitor how wet our girls get. I especially don't let them go to roost while very wet. My two LF get wet to the skin but have the good sense to go into the coop to groom and dry off out of the cold rain, but our Silkies didn't seem to inherit that good sense.