Fire Ant Farm
Get off my lawn
Thanks, Kristin! Super helpful. One of the PCs was acting really distressed and panting hard, so I stuck his legs in the water bowl. Glad I did the right thing. I'll probably have to give my old hen a bit more assistance... Poor girl starts panting near 75. Planted firmly in the coop in the corner once it hits 80. She definitely gets more heat sensitive as she ages.
I use those Fortex pans (the plastic ones, not the rubber ones) and they use it as another water source and a foot bath. When it gets really hot (you can judge what "really hot" means for your chickens) I will sometimes put some ice in the pan in the morning so it stays cooler through the day.
You can also freeze water in gallon jugs and have them available on the floor of the coop - they will learn to snuggle up next to one if they are too hot. That's a very common thing many do. (People do that with rabbits, too.)
lol.
Well thanks.
Oh did I mention the humidity? It's at 91%
I would fall over and die. So would all my birds.
It's different for the North.... we aren't nor are our birds acclimated to 100's.
My ducks sit out in below zero weather... im sure yours would die.... although I won't let mine sit out long in them temps.... they protest when I put them away.
Exactly - all about adaptation (as well as predisposition - I've heard Chanteclers would drop dead at our temps...). As with us humans - it's early in the season, they may do better as they get more used to it this summer. The older ones may not be able to adapt as well, so you can have those options available for them.
Keeping chickens alive in the heat is one of the primary things I focused on before I even got chickens. That's why I have the breeds I do and not others. I also don't go overboard with the cooling stuff, because I want to know if they have a hard time - if so they are culled (or at least not used as breeders). I use misters, but ONLY when it's consistently over 95F. I turn them off under 95. I want my birds well adapted to my climate.
I've been watching the S&G broiler NNs like a hawk, and am going to keep the boys as long as I can before culling (except some obvious ones - e.g., cross beak that's picked on). I want to see EXACTLY how well they do in the summer. If any begin to suffer at a temp that I judge to be too low, I'll cull, and keep the ones who are most active and seem to do well. (I have a top contender now, but as anything can happen, I still will evaluate the others.)
Also, Banti, when they get hot (and drink lots), their poop gets really loose/watery, and if you don't realize that, you might think they are sick or have worms.
- Ant Farm