Oh, sure - after I've invested in vertical nipple waterers and then upgraded to horizontal ones I find out about these.Yes...nipple cup waterers. They still give them the opportunity to drink like they prefer but still keeps the water clean and manageable. I've found that the adult birds prefer these over the straight, red nipples that chicks prefer but that the chicks don't seem to be able to trigger these nipple cups, so this bucket below is rigged with both in case I have chicks in with the big flock and both need to drink from the same bucket. In this pic, no adult birds are using it so it's dry in the cup...this is chicks in the brooder accessing the red nipples on the bottom of the bucket.
I've found that adult birds learn to use this style nipple more quickly than the other nipples and as they drink they trigger more water to flow into the cup so the cup is never dry. You can hang a bucket and have several of these nipples in the same bucket to serve several birds....and you won't often find the cups filled with debris that has been kicked up, though the occasional leaf piece will find itself there...you just twist the cup upside down, swipe it with your finger to clean out the debris and twist it back, trigger the nipple to add more water to the cup and you are good to go.
They are even easier to install into a bucket than the red nipples. I am currently using one such bucket in my rooster pen and he learned to use it right away. This past winter I used one for a whole pen of roosters and would put warm/hot water in it in the morning and it would stay thawed and usable all day long, even when temps were in the teens and 20s. The next morning I'd find the bucket almost empty but with a rim of ice coating the insides and the nipple frozen...just add more warm water, it thaws out and stays that way all day...and so on and so forth.
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