Coop fire

scooter147

Songster
11 Years
Jul 30, 2008
2,042
88
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Missouri
A family lost their home to a chicken coop fire in the Barnhardt/Imperial area in Missouri earlier this week.
The family had two heats lamps in the chicken coop, somehow the lamps caused a fire in the coop. The winds were very high on this evening and embers from the coop fire caught the house on fire. The home was a total loss.

If heat lamps are a absolute necessity please be very very careful with them.
 
It is awful. The good news is at least it happened while the family was still awake and no one died. They saw the coop on fire called the fire department but the winds that night were terrible and by the time the fire department got there the house was well on it's way to a total loss. The husband apparently saw the embers landing on the roof and he tried to hook up the garden hose that was rolled up but in single degree temps he couldn't get water.

Enola a agree.

I tell people all the time when they ask me about chickens and cold weather and warming the coop that I have NEVER had a bird die do to the cold, never in 40+ years of raising chickens. I'll be anyone a crisp one hundred dollar bill that I will lose at least one in the 100+ degree weather every year.


A dry, draft free well ventilated coop is all that is required and a good diet and access to fresh water all day.
 
I don't quite understand why people aren't just using stuff like dog kennel heating pads? They're not THAT expensive, and if the birds get cold enough, they'll be fine huddling on the pad vs roosting. Plus, they're "safe" and designed for use outdoors. A $50 dog heating pad is certainly cheaper than building a new coop and replacing your chickens.
 
And it seems it's always the southern states where folks are so sure their birds are going to freeze to death. Seriously, what's cold in Missouri is normal winter weather in Minnesota, and birds live just fine there. Folks just don't use (un)common sense.
 
And it seems it's always the southern states where folks are so sure their birds are going to freeze to death. Seriously, what's cold in Missouri is normal winter weather in Minnesota, and birds live just fine there. Folks just don't use (un)common sense.

And to add....

And holy cow, what did folks do a hundred years ago in the winter...I'm sure people didn't lose their whole flocks every winter because they were cold.... Seriously, people need to understand that our farm animals didn't just hatch in the late 20th century and not be adapted to the weather conditions.
 
And to add....

And holy cow, what did folks do a hundred years ago in the winter...I'm sure people didn't lose their whole flocks every winter because they were cold.... Seriously, people need to understand that our farm animals didn't just hatch in the late 20th century and not be adapted to the weather conditions.
Exactly, especially breeds like RIR, Rocks--they were developed in New England. Course, I believe birds back then were just a lot hardier than today's flocks.....
 

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