Hello,
I'm a newbie here, living in Northern BC and we're soon-to-be first time chicken parents. I'm just trying to work out what we'll have to set up through the coming year. We have a coop from our home's previous owner, with a run and all that jazz so we're pretty well set for the summer. My question is about how to prep for next winter... we could tell when we moved in that the previous owners obviously moved the chickens in winter to a shed that's closer to the house. The "summer coop" is huge (hard to heat) and really far from any power source so my guess is that they moved them to the shed because it was easier to get power to it and heat it.
My question is, if we move them to the smaller shed for winter (so it's easier for them to create enough heat on their own) and it's got good insulation, ventilation, draft-free, etc. at what point would I need to consider heating the coop? This past winter we had two weeks of temperatures below -50C (-58f), but it's not always that cold. We need to be prepared for anything from -25C to -50C or below, and I don't want to be scrambling when temps drop.
Is there anyone else in here that has chickens in similar temperatures, and if so do you ever heat your coop?
Thanks in advance.
I'm a newbie here, living in Northern BC and we're soon-to-be first time chicken parents. I'm just trying to work out what we'll have to set up through the coming year. We have a coop from our home's previous owner, with a run and all that jazz so we're pretty well set for the summer. My question is about how to prep for next winter... we could tell when we moved in that the previous owners obviously moved the chickens in winter to a shed that's closer to the house. The "summer coop" is huge (hard to heat) and really far from any power source so my guess is that they moved them to the shed because it was easier to get power to it and heat it.
My question is, if we move them to the smaller shed for winter (so it's easier for them to create enough heat on their own) and it's got good insulation, ventilation, draft-free, etc. at what point would I need to consider heating the coop? This past winter we had two weeks of temperatures below -50C (-58f), but it's not always that cold. We need to be prepared for anything from -25C to -50C or below, and I don't want to be scrambling when temps drop.
Is there anyone else in here that has chickens in similar temperatures, and if so do you ever heat your coop?
Thanks in advance.
