Nope, not me.I thought it was @Wyorp Rock but I'm not sure.
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Nope, not me.I thought it was @Wyorp Rock but I'm not sure.
Hmmm. Ok. I don't remember who it is then.Nope, not me.
According to the calculator I need to build several more coops and a goat shed.To find out how many chickens you'll actually cap out at go here: https://www.heritageacresmarket.com/chicken-math-calculator/
Take the quiz and you'll see what you'll wind up with.
Ya, why the hell would I have 2 goats?According to the calculator I need to build several more coops and a goat shed.![]()
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I had goats as a kid. They were fun pets. They would follow us around eating wild blackberries.Ya, why the hell would I have 2 goats?
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I didn't see if anybody addressed the temperature question. I'm in MA so a lot further north than Virginia, and by southern standards MA wouldn't be "too hot" either, but it's still really hot for chickens in the summer. Especially now that summers are getting hotter and hotter. We have sustained periods of 90-degree days that we didn't used to get at all. Coops heat up and retain heat well into the night, and the temperature inside can climb WAY above the max outside temperature. So you're going to need a lot of ventilation, and not to overstuff your coop. To illustrate my point - my coop is 5"x7" and in full shade during the day in the summer. My first summer with this coop, I had 5 chickens in there and 14 square feet of open ventilation (wraparound vents under the eaves and two windows). Outside temperature during the day was in the 80s, with the occasional 90-degree day, sometimes a stretch of several 90-degree days in a row. My chickens were panting at night so I put a thermometer in there and it read 110 degrees at midnight!!!! Long after sundown and after the ambient temperature outside had dropped significantly from the daytime high. So I removed the human access door and replaced it with a hardware cloth screen door, and added 2 fans. That helped a lot, but the coop still retains heat. I can imagine what this is like further south, and with several times as many chickens breathing in there all night.I’m in Virginia. It doesn’t get too hot
I had goats when I wasn't a kid. They were only fun pets when they had kids.I had goats as a kid. They were fun pets. They would follow us around eating wild blackberries.