Thanks for the Vaseline tip! I haven't had a night cold enough to try it, but the past two it got down to -4 F, with a pretty nasty windchill of -15 or something. So I applied Vaseline to the comb & wattles of that rooster who had a touch of frostbite a few weeks ago. His tips are still black, they never fell off or changed back to red, but there is NO spreading of the frostbite on his comb after two pretty nasty nights!! We do not use heat lamps.
I also went through and applied sweet PDZ to the bedding and added more dry bedding to my deep litter, and opened up another vent in the roost room of my coop to maximize the fresh air and provide dry bedding. Everyone else looks good, too. I even had 2 chickens who were roosting in a tree outside cluck at me and follow me in when I brought the food and water this morning. Neither of them have any signs of frostbite, so I think there's something to the dry/well-ventilated theory that some have.
I even got my first egg in about a month!!! I've been adding cayenne to the feed & water to stimulate laying, now that most are done molting. Just a really exciting morning for me!
I also went through and applied sweet PDZ to the bedding and added more dry bedding to my deep litter, and opened up another vent in the roost room of my coop to maximize the fresh air and provide dry bedding. Everyone else looks good, too. I even had 2 chickens who were roosting in a tree outside cluck at me and follow me in when I brought the food and water this morning. Neither of them have any signs of frostbite, so I think there's something to the dry/well-ventilated theory that some have.
I even got my first egg in about a month!!! I've been adding cayenne to the feed & water to stimulate laying, now that most are done molting. Just a really exciting morning for me!
