The original poster made this thread to ask for help. It is not a blog.Brisk wind outside 48F in the coop. The temp is falling
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The original poster made this thread to ask for help. It is not a blog.Brisk wind outside 48F in the coop. The temp is falling
So should I clean it now or wait until the weather is more dry in the spring? I assume the sooner the better for getting rid of mold, but I don't want to paint over damp wood if the humidity is high. I will try to do a big coop cleaning this week, if it ever stops raining!Now for a small chicken coop that’s a bit over kill, some good elbow grease and scrubbing will do the job. A good Spring cleaning job to do, I don’t see it too bad just some black speckles, which I cannot really say is mold or what - err on the side of caution.
I also am not sure if it is mold or not. Its pretty much all over the plywood ceiling, so hopefully I can get it all out. None on the walls, though. I plan to clean it off with a spray and then when it dries I will paint on some primer made to prevent mold.It is likely too cold to use paint/primer right now.So should I clean it now or wait until the weather is more dry in the spring? I assume the sooner the better for getting rid of mold, but I don't want to paint over damp wood if the humidity is high. I will try to do a big coop cleaning this week, if it ever stops raining!I also am not sure if it is mold or not. Its pretty much all over the plywood ceiling, so hopefully I can get it all out. None on the walls, though. I plan to clean it off with a spray and then when it dries I will paint on some primer made to prevent mold.
Good to know! Given the mold is not too bad, should I just clean it now and wait until spring (or a dry day) to paint?It is likely too cold to use paint/primer right now.
What kind of spray will you be using? I'm not sure cleaning with chemicals or even vinegar in the winter is a good idea since you won't be able to easily air out the coop without the chickens inside.Good to know! Given the mold is not too bad, should I just clean it now and wait until spring (or a dry day) to paint?
Good to know! Given the mold is not too bad, should I just clean it now and wait until spring (or a dry day) to paint?
)Absolutely.
In the seven years I've been keeping chickens every winter we've gone sub-zero at some point or another.
I've had frostbite on two males. The first time it was -23F and my single comb rooster got a mild case of frostbite dubbing. The second time was last year when a cockerel with huge wattles dunked them into the fount waterer and the ends froze. Other than that, I've had no frostbite in my flock.
I have approximately 17 sq ft of permanently open ventilation in the ridge vent, gable vents and soffit vents along with two windows cracked open away from the roosting area and two pop doors that are kept open year round. I have no insulation in my coop.
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If you have adequate ventilation over your birds heads with some way for fresh air to come in down low you should not have any frostbite. Also, keep the coop is dry as possible. If you have any water source in the coop at all it needs to come out.
Yeah, I'm not seeing mold in those photos. That's good news!Here is a picture of my OSB ceiling - to me that doesn't really look like mold, just normal OSB texture. I am no expert when it comes to this and have never dealt with mold, so it could be, I just don't know. And in person, the spots look much lighter - like a reddish brown.
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Here is another one of mine:
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To compare, this image below is a google image of an OSB board, and it looks very similar to mine. Mine is a bit darker, but maybe that is just shadows/lighting? Who knows... I will keep an eye on it.
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