Insulating for the cold with a coop made for the heat!

dadeainsley

In the Brooder
Dec 21, 2024
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13
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Hi y'all!

This is my first winter with my flock so I apologize if this is a silly question. I have 9 bantam chickens, and I had thought I had insulated my coop well. However, they're still shivering! I'm in western North Carolina, and I have two silkies that aren't phenomenally cold-hardy, as well as two old Englishes, a plymouth barred rock, a mini brahma, two Rhode Island Reds, and a dominique. They are all between 8 and 10 months old. I've been giving them heated mash throughout the day and have added a structure they can hide in within their coop. They have constant access to high protein food, I've been warming water, and I've done my best to keep the wind out. They're shivering at 27 degrees, and we're projected to hit the teens overnight this weekend; the wind has also been brutal.

I was evacuated for two months from Helene; we stayed in South Carolina so I'm worried they aren't as cold acclimated, and I wasn't able to build up as much deep litter as I wanted to. If at all possible, I would like to get the deep litter method stirring before it gets really cold in January or February, if I'm able to! (Currently building this out with pine shavings and chopped straw bedding, but I stripped everything after the storm because our coop was flooded. I added about 2 inches of litter from the coop they were staying in down south, but I know it isn't enough.) Our coop is built for the heat with great (maybe too good) ventilation up top, and it's off the ground. They have wooden perches and I've blocked off the wind in their run with cardboard, haybales, and tarps. But they're still poofy and shivering!! If I need to take them inside I can, but I don't want to prevent them from acclimating any further.

Please let me know if these natural methods will work, or if I need to run down and get an ambient heater due to the acclimation situation!!

Thank you so much :)
 
Hiya, and welcome to BYC! :frow

Something else is wrong as at 27F those chickens shouldn't be that cold. We do keep our coop to 40F, but all of our silkies, including the 4-month-olds, were just out yesterday in 22F and windy but sunny. The 4-month-olds didn't stay out too long, though.

Check the humidity as maybe it's high in there. That with cold can make them colder.

We have horse bedding pellets and a nipple waterer to keep the humidity down as it's horrible here in WI much of the time.

You could pick up a radiant heater like a Cozy Coop for them to perch by too.
 
Maybe since they are bantams, they don't have the size to thrive as easily in the cold. It could also be they just need a few more weeks of acclimating, like you said.

Are there any direct drafts on them? Lots of ventilation is good. A general rule of thumb is 1 square foot of ventilation per bird, (but you don't want any direct drafts.)

We have insulated our coop with the foam insulation boards. It has the foam boards on the outside, but the entire top of the walls is open hardware cloth for ventilation. There are only full size chickens in there, though; I, so far, have only kept my bantams inside. 😆

I hope you can figure out a way to get them nice and comfy! Thanks for joining and welcome to BackYard Chickens!
 
Welcome to BYC.
I'm in Texas and have a couple of big open coops. When it gets very cold (not too often) I use tarps to cut the wind. I still leave about 18" under the eves, all the way around, for ventilation. Frostbite generally happens because people get too stressed over the cold and block too much of the ventilation. I did that my first year and my poor rooster got some Frostbite on his comb.
 
Hi @dadeainsley :frow

It looks like you got some good responses. But I wanted to say that I have RIR, Barred Rock, and a mixed breed from the 2. We do not have a heated coop on purpose. I wanted chickens that were extremely cold hardy, so that I didn't have to depend on the grid to keep birds.

On average, winter temperatures in our area are in the low to mid 20s. But we do dip in the single digits on occasion. I have taken precaution to ensure there are no drafts. I switch to deep liter bedding toward the end of fall. And for the last few years, I have not had any problems.

Welcome!
 

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