I live in Texas where we hardly ever get cold enough to require supplemental heat for adult chickens (very few days that are below freezing, a few nights hovering in the 20s and 30s, and almost never below 20F). However in the summer (march-october, lol), it is regularly over a 100F with very high humidity, and because of the humidity it doesn't cool down much at night.
I think it's clear that my coop here should look different than when I lived up north. There aren't bears or snow here, for one. When I look at TSC and other retail stores though, all the coops are very one-size-fits-all. Even the designs I see online seem to follow a generic pattern that doesn't account for the climate.
At last to my question! How do I design my coop so that my birds can cool down at night? Should I have a larger hardware cloth run-area where they can sleep with total ventilation? Or should they still sleep in the closed-house portion? If they are sleeping in the inner house, would it help to have extra hardware cloth vents near the roof? What about having a wood wall on one half of the coop, hardware cloth on the other, but no wall between them so that there's lots of ventilation but also protection from the wind and occasional rain?
PS. I've sold two coops now because my chickens kept trying to sleep on top of them, rather than in them, presumably because of either heat or because they like to be up high. They were willing to sleep in a pallet-coop I made for them that was very open, but it was ugly as heck so I'm now trying to design something a little nicer.
Thanks so much in advance!
I think it's clear that my coop here should look different than when I lived up north. There aren't bears or snow here, for one. When I look at TSC and other retail stores though, all the coops are very one-size-fits-all. Even the designs I see online seem to follow a generic pattern that doesn't account for the climate.
At last to my question! How do I design my coop so that my birds can cool down at night? Should I have a larger hardware cloth run-area where they can sleep with total ventilation? Or should they still sleep in the closed-house portion? If they are sleeping in the inner house, would it help to have extra hardware cloth vents near the roof? What about having a wood wall on one half of the coop, hardware cloth on the other, but no wall between them so that there's lots of ventilation but also protection from the wind and occasional rain?
PS. I've sold two coops now because my chickens kept trying to sleep on top of them, rather than in them, presumably because of either heat or because they like to be up high. They were willing to sleep in a pallet-coop I made for them that was very open, but it was ugly as heck so I'm now trying to design something a little nicer.
Thanks so much in advance!