sunmanchicken127
In the Brooder
Hello
Northern UT here. We have been getting as low at 20 degrees at night lately.
I noticed last night there was blood all over my feeders. Upon some investigating, I found my barred rocks both had what looks like frostbite across their combs. They stick their heads through the fence so I am guessing doing that mixed with the frostbite caused them to bleed. They look like they naturally stopped bleeding within a few hours and I am going to grab blu-kote today and apply it. I also am seeing some small specs of black on my Rhode Island Reds' combs.
I have been working on fixing a coop my chickens are in. We have enough space and roosting bars, but I am stuck on what to do next. Here's what I have:
I want to use ventilation to fix the frostbite. I was going to add another hardware cloth slot on the opposite side of the current one that's right above the shingles (picture #1). However, as you can see, this would put a pretty bad draft across their heads. I don't know how to add more ventilation without putting a draft across them. I am willing to use artificial heating as an absolute last resort, but I am hoping there are other ideas here so I don't have to. My entire flock is 2 BR, 3 RIR, 2 EE & 1 Leghorn.
This is also the first winter for all of them minus 1 RIR and the Leghorn. Those two are a few years old but the other 6 are 6 months old.
Thanks for any help / input.
Northern UT here. We have been getting as low at 20 degrees at night lately.
I noticed last night there was blood all over my feeders. Upon some investigating, I found my barred rocks both had what looks like frostbite across their combs. They stick their heads through the fence so I am guessing doing that mixed with the frostbite caused them to bleed. They look like they naturally stopped bleeding within a few hours and I am going to grab blu-kote today and apply it. I also am seeing some small specs of black on my Rhode Island Reds' combs.
I have been working on fixing a coop my chickens are in. We have enough space and roosting bars, but I am stuck on what to do next. Here's what I have:
I want to use ventilation to fix the frostbite. I was going to add another hardware cloth slot on the opposite side of the current one that's right above the shingles (picture #1). However, as you can see, this would put a pretty bad draft across their heads. I don't know how to add more ventilation without putting a draft across them. I am willing to use artificial heating as an absolute last resort, but I am hoping there are other ideas here so I don't have to. My entire flock is 2 BR, 3 RIR, 2 EE & 1 Leghorn.
This is also the first winter for all of them minus 1 RIR and the Leghorn. Those two are a few years old but the other 6 are 6 months old.
Thanks for any help / input.