How do you light your coop at night?

Jae

In the Brooder
Mar 3, 2018
16
7
46
I'm in cold northern area. Lots of snow.
I'm being told not to use heat lamps or anything A for fire risk and B in case our weather causes a power outage which will shock and kill them.

Can I run lights out there though? If power cords are a no no then what do I do to keep their water from freezing?
 
I ran a cord out to my coop and have LED lights.

In the winter I use a 250 watt submersible heater in my vertical nipple bucket. So long as the nipples are insulated and only the metal part sticks out tested good down to 0°F.

vert-nipple01.jpg vert-nipple02.jpg vert-nipple03.jpg vert-nipple04.jpg vert-nipple05.jpg

JT
 
I'm in cold northern area. Lots of snow.
I'm being told not to use heat lamps or anything A for fire risk and B in case our weather causes a power outage which will shock and kill them.

Can I run lights out there though? If power cords are a no no then what do I do to keep their water from freezing?
I have two rubber pans for winter. While one's in the run, the other's thawing in front of the woodstove.
 
I'm not sure if you want the light for the birds for laying purposes, or the light for you to be able to check on things after dark. I have a solar powered motion sensored LED light on the outside of the coop. When I walk out there after dark to take care of things it automatically comes on and I can see what I'm doing. I hang it on a screw and can easily take it down and use it like a flashlight if I need to see something that the beam does not reach. No electric needed.

Last winter I ran an extension cord to a heated dog bowl for thawed water. The bowl burned out before winter was done. I switched to rubber buckets and just filled them in the morning and again after work. It seemed to be sufficient and I no longer needed electric. When its that cold I like to check on everyone at least twice a day anyway. I had to be sure to dump the water overnight or bring the buckets in the house so they wouldn't be a block of ice in the morning. It's winter here most of the year. It snowed just this past weekend. I'm not sure if I will try to heat the water differently next year or just continue to change it out twice a day.

There are a lot of good articles on waterers for your flock here.

https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/category/feeders-waterers.26/
 
Night time they do not need heat or light they sleep at night as we do their rest time only peeps need warmth I like the summer to grow up peeps so we do not need heat but use a heating pad not light bulbs and if i need to have aquarium heaters in my 5 gallon water
buckets but use horizontal nipples
 
I have two rubber pans for winter. While one's in the run, the other's thawing in front of the woodstove.

i use the rubber pans as well. although i have multiple i only switch them up when 1 needs to be cleaned. i find if it freezes a good amount through i can just flip it upside down step on the top and the ice dislodges.

i dont mind the multiple stops a day as i am already checking for eggs and observing the birds. and i dont need to run a power cord.
 
Not my picture, but this is what I am using for a water heater. It was 7 Fahrenheit this morning and my water was still wet.
 

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