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I have quite a small coop. Would a large heat lamp in the middle keep the nesting boxes to the side of it warm enough the eggs don't freeze?
PLEASE do a quick search on heat lamps and the dangers and risks involved using them.
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I have quite a small coop. Would a large heat lamp in the middle keep the nesting boxes to the side of it warm enough the eggs don't freeze?
how else?PLEASE do a quick search on heat lamps and the dangers and risks involved using them.
I can vouch for Ron's method too. I am also in NJ and my eggs were freezing. We haven't built permanent nest boxes yet so we have 2 plastic crates we have been using lined with straw. We already had 2 seedling mats and bought the thermocube at Home Depot. The only thing we haven't done is put the mats on a timer. No excuse really, but with the ice and snow I can't always get to the coop that day so the heat mats keep the eggs from freezing overnight until we can get them the next morning. We have had NO frozen eggs in the boxes, and only one here or there that is laid outside of the box from our young chickens that just started laying. The last 2 nights it's been below 0 and still no frozen eggs. The chickens also don't seem to be hanging out in the boxes just for the heat either.
How e
how else?
Coldest we got here was -22 Celsius. I'll have to find a way to keep my new one warm when I build it. I don't want to have heatpads. That to me poses a risk all on it's own.
I haven't had an egg freeze and crack since I switched from lining my nest boxes with pine needles to straw. I also have a layer of straw on the coop floor where in the past it was covered in only sweet PDZ.
It's been sub zero and windy for what seems like forever.