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It is marginally better today, it's 94° as compared to 102°, and the heat index is down to 109° instead of 121°. It's still miserable out! My birds are panting, but I don't get the overall sense of doom today, I'm hoping they'll be ok. A few are on the nest, which amazes me in this heat, I can't believe they're still laying eggs. Five yesterday, we'll see about today, I just brought in two.
I wanted to ask you, easttxchick, did the cold kill the birds, or just damage their combs? I've found they can adapt to cold, it's the heat that's going to kill them. Thankfully we haven't gone that far yet
Reinbeau-I myself didn't lose any birds to the cold because I was the fool that was out in the cold putting up plastic on the walls and stacking the north wall of my coop with hay bales to keep my babies warm. I also didn't have a single case of frostbitten comb. Had I known how to knit, my poor birds would probably have been trying to walk around with little knitted "mittens" on their feet and my roosters would have had knitted comb protectors(Gee-that sounds sad even to me).
I did have a friend that had some guineas freeze to death in the trees after we had one of those incredibley cold(to us) days with rain right around New Years. I think our problem was it wasn't just cold-it was cold and wet so people had birds that they failed to get in at night that froze in the trees(like my neighbors guineas) after getting wet.
The irony of all of this is that it has been hot(even by our standards) down here so far this year, but we had about a week of cloudy weather from the hurricane and the first day the sun came out(and it was HOT)-I walked out in my pasture and saw birds laying on their sides everywhere! I ran out there expecting they had been attacked by a hawk or something and they were all sunning themselves. Go figure.
I'm glad you are getting even a small break in your temperatures-every degree helps.