Insulating a coop, necessary or busy work?

tororider

Songster
Feb 6, 2008
375
2
194
Southeast MI
As you all know the winters in MI can get a bit cold. I am wondering if it is necessary to insulate a coop? I will be building a 5'widex4'longx4'tall coop. I will make sure that it is tight, with no drafts. I am thinking about using the deep litter method. I will have four winter hardy laying hens. Do I need to insulate the coop, or will their body heat keep it plenty warm in there during the cold? Thanks for the help.
 
In your area, I think at least putting up interior walls with a dead air space would help. I did that on one coop and on another one, I used all my saved Walmart plastic bags to stuff in the airspaces. Just the airspace between inner and outer walls helps alot without buying insulation.
 
I have no problem insulating it if need be, but I have seen others say that it wasn't necessary, so I wanted to check with a forum of experts. Consensus so far seems to be for the insulation. More opinions please!
 
I'm also wondering about this. Our plan is to build the coop inside one corner of our barn with the east and south walls being the barn walls and a bank of windows on the south wall. We live in central Ohio and it's not quite as cold as MI, but we're in the flatland and get tremendous wind coming from the west and southwest. Sometimes sustained winds of 40-50 mph.
 
I also live in SE MI. You need to insulate. I also used heavy plywood as interior walls. At the very least get the West wall insulated to protect against the wind.
I'm sure someone will tell you its not necessary. But after this miserable long winter I am so happy that I spent the extra bucks and did it right. My girls were OK, they still have their toes, and my Roo still has his comb.
When that wind went through this area at 50 MPH and it was bitter cold and the coop still got down to 12 deg inside. That was with a heat lamp and a flat panel heater going.
 
I would definately insulate the coop. It gets mighty cold in MI...the winds are pretty cutting. And then you have a chicken that's going thru a molt during the winter, you'll be glad you have insulation!! It's worth the extra bucks!!
 
What types of hens do you have? That will make a difference.

I have 3 Buff Orps which are pretty hardy. I'm in the southern part of MN and we've had a pretty cold winter, and my 8x12 shed is not insulated. The birds are fine. My next door neighbor has 25+ hens and he doesn't insulate.

Let me ask you: did your grandma insulate her coop? Mine never did and she raised chickens all her life.

If you want to insulate, well, its your money.
 
With an uninsulated coop, will they survive? Probably yes. Will they be at all comfortable and avoid losing toes and comb parts? Maybe not. Just depends on how draft free and dry the bldg is, etc. It does not have to cost alot to add an inner wall, even thin plywood scraps/masonite will help and plastic bags saved from grocery store trips cost nothing and it keeps them out of the landfills.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom