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twobuckchuckfarm
Chirping
- May 26, 2022
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Thank you so much for all your insight! The horizontal nipples have been their primary water source for around 8 weeks. I did have issues with them freezing durring this cold snap. Perhaps she became dehydrated when the deicer couldn't keep up? Despite providing containers of snow and hot soaked crumbleHow long before the cold snap did you switch to a nipple waterer?
Being very well hydrated can help keep a good blood flow through the comb and waddles which can help keep them warm enough. If Stella was a bit reluctant to drink from a new type of waterer she might have been a little dehydrated even if the water was available.
If you are far enough north to have long nights, that could be part of the problem if she didn't drink enough water before roosting. They don't get down to drink in the dark.
Another possibility is that she hadn't been exposed to cold enough for her body to adapt to it. I've recently been reading research about genes in chickens that control how much heat their muscles generate. These genes are switched on and off by exposure to extreme-ish (for a chicken to be comfortable) temperatures. Some of this research talks about different breeds being more responsive in this way than other breeds.
Size of her comb, size of her body, differences in her feathering might be part of it.
Or she may just have roosted in a more exposed spot or something like that.
Or a little of each.
Or something none of us have heard of.
to accomodate the lack of water flowing from their 2 gallon tank.
I definitely hear what you are saying in regards to shock and breed hardiness. This cold snap was unlike anything Ive seen in years, and certainly the coldest my girls have experienced! Its probably telling that the rest of my hens with pea combs suffered no complications. As much as I love the look of Stella's adorable rosey wobbly bits, it may be safer to choose breeds with small combs/waddles in the future.