Parront
Crossing the Road
It is their habit to roost in the tree. They are not used to the cold weather, but the birds have down to keep them warm as long as they stay dry and out of the wind. It gets into the single digits here at night, 7-9 degrees, I take them water from the house in the morning, and pour a gallon of warm water into the 5 gal bucket water container. I use nipples on the bottom, ice forms on the nipples at night. By noon, it is thawed. I take in the extra water dish in the evening so it doesn't freeze. It is a bit of a pain to go out and give them water at 6 am, but the cold does not last long here and I did not want to have a long extension cord going out to the coop.Hey Justin! Welcome to BYC, friend!!! I wondered if that was you! I already had a lamp hung and pointed at the area with the roosting bars. All I had to do to keep it in liquid state was turn the bulb towards the waterer instead of the chickens. Since the bucket is in a corner smack dab between the human door & their pop door, I also stapled a couple layers of plastic sheeting starting about midway & going down to the bottom. It blocked a ton of those winds & still provided ventilation. My girls have never chosen to roost inside the coop; they roost in a kumquat tree out in the run. We had to chase them down right before dark & lock them in the coop...apparently they even prefer their tree when it’s snowy, rainy, WINDY & about 15 degrees out there! HAHA