Maybe not as cold...but also can actually can absorb any/most moisture that forms on the surface.Painted surfaces were moist and damp, exposed wood was dry, more or less.
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Maybe not as cold...but also can actually can absorb any/most moisture that forms on the surface.Painted surfaces were moist and damp, exposed wood was dry, more or less.
What I failed to mention was what was going on with my Woods house. When I went to check on it, the windows in it......inside and out.....were soaked. Water was dripping from them......and that was windows right next to the wide open front. These windows are hard vinyl plastic frames with glass panes. Plastic frames were wet too. Painted exterior of even the vertical walls was wet and water running down them. But inside and above the birds? Painted surfaces were moist and damp, exposed wood was dry, more or less.
Quote: @JackE .....Curious......When do you close up your windows for 'winter mode'?
I've never seen that in my Woods. The coop has been through some temp extremes, but I've never seen a build up of moisture/condensation, ever.
Quote: Deep litter on dirt vs wood floor, huge difference...true composting deep litter needs moisture, good reason IMO not to have it in the coop.
@JackE .....Curious......When do you close up your windows for 'winter mode'?
As I recall, your window frames are wood and you also have a wood floor, so yours would be the driest of the dry version. About the only place moisture is going to come from is from the birds themselves, so that depends on your bird density per SF. If that is low, that is going to be a dry house.
My bird density is around 10 sf per bird, but I've got deep litter on dirt, and the day before all this happened, we got nearly an inch of rain, so way down below the litter, I suspect I'd find some ground moisture rising up from around the edges. Pretty dry in comparison to a lot of places, but not as dry as Jack's house would be.