
One of the blood vessels in my eye has blown from looking at the monitor.

Jeez guyz... LOL and learn too, I was home feeling ill so I sat all day and read. I finally started taking notes. I have had chickens for less than a year. I have kept all sorts of other types of animals and am not that young anymore, just getting better.
All I want to know is at what temperature would one begin to fret say if the inside of the coop was draft free and just cold with good ventilation and everything else being near "normal/good chicken husbandry" fresh water food basic health etc...
Thanks you Old Timers for sharing the skills. No Doubt. I like that saying that, "if you fall down or pass out in the coop they, the chickens, will eat you." Hahahaha
Really Thank you all for making an eggsilent read. It took me forever to figure out what ACV and BOSS was. Too funny. It sucks being the greenhorn sometimes esp. when people take advantage and try to steal you blind.
Good OLD TIMERS PLEASE TELL ME.... How cold is too cold for chickens? I live in eastern Montana and it can get sortta cold up here. A lady down the way has about 50 chickens in an old wooden outbuilding which is old and a bit drafty and her chickens lived through last winter. It was freezzzzzzing last winter with months where the temp did not go above freezing and some weeks on end where it never went over ZERO! Two nights the wind chill was -51. Brrrrrrrrrrrr... The still air in the coop would be Brrrrrrrr cold same as outisde temp could be maybe -30 for a few weeks maybe.
Am I the only dufus that is trying to keep chickens over winter up near the Canadian border. Should I get a few heat lamps for the colder than 20 below zero weather or what?
All I want to know is at what temperature would one begin to fret. Tell me the cold hard truth, Please.

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