Digesting their regular full nutrition feed will keep them just as warm as canned corn or scratch.....and be healthierextra scratch in mornings ( canned corn works too ). You want to get that internal furnace of theirs going by digesting food.

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Digesting their regular full nutrition feed will keep them just as warm as canned corn or scratch.....and be healthierextra scratch in mornings ( canned corn works too ). You want to get that internal furnace of theirs going by digesting food.
I'm in north texas also and we are prepping for the unusually cold weather. It's been in the 20's for 3 days. Nothing compared to our northern states, but definitely far from the norm here. We wrapped the run with clearish plastic tarp at the beginning of winter, leaving enough gaps at the top for ventilation. We also have a roof on the run, so everyone is nice and dry. I have plugs for the windows, so they are securely in place, but we do have ventilation holes up in the eves of the roof.I live in NE Texas. We have mild winters with temps that rarely drop below freezing. But the polar vortex is heading our way and the low on Monday is 1 degree F. Temps will be in the teens and 20’s over the next week.
I put a thick layer of new straw in the coop today. I have 8 hens, so they generate quite a bit of heat themselves.
How cold is too cold? Do I need to put a heater in the coop during the coldest nights? Anything else I can do to help keep my hens safe?
I attached a picture of our coop.