BackyardDinoMom
Chirping
Hi BYC! First, I want to say I appreciate your grand wisdom.
I'm located in northern Utah, and I know I'm going to need some solutions to keep my water thawed in winter. Our average winter lows are overnight of mid 20's but it can decrease to the low teens for days or weeks at a time.
My coop and run are situated away from the house, so I don't have electricity out there, at least not this winter. It is on the docket for next year if we can figure it out financially. The coop is 4.5' x 4.5 with decent ventilation and an option to insulate the actual coop if temperatures require it, and a 4x8 run with a cover. I have 6 hens, and they are all pretty satisfied with this set up as long as they get their dedicated free range time in the evenings. I'm not sure how the winter weather will change their view on the situation, but I do have plans to extend the coop to 6x6 and make a run that's about 15 x 20, partially covered and partially netted.
Right now they have a standard poultry drinker and a small 6 cup gravity feeder from when they were babies, but we're looking to upgrade.
I bought the poultry cups, and I'd love to build a PVC tube and cup system so they can have more space in their run, but wondered if anyone has any Utah winter friendly solutions for ensuring the cups don't freeze. I envision they will probably want to roam less in the colder, wetter months, so the space will be valuable.
Thoughts? Picture because they are cute.
I'm located in northern Utah, and I know I'm going to need some solutions to keep my water thawed in winter. Our average winter lows are overnight of mid 20's but it can decrease to the low teens for days or weeks at a time.
My coop and run are situated away from the house, so I don't have electricity out there, at least not this winter. It is on the docket for next year if we can figure it out financially. The coop is 4.5' x 4.5 with decent ventilation and an option to insulate the actual coop if temperatures require it, and a 4x8 run with a cover. I have 6 hens, and they are all pretty satisfied with this set up as long as they get their dedicated free range time in the evenings. I'm not sure how the winter weather will change their view on the situation, but I do have plans to extend the coop to 6x6 and make a run that's about 15 x 20, partially covered and partially netted.
Right now they have a standard poultry drinker and a small 6 cup gravity feeder from when they were babies, but we're looking to upgrade.
I bought the poultry cups, and I'd love to build a PVC tube and cup system so they can have more space in their run, but wondered if anyone has any Utah winter friendly solutions for ensuring the cups don't freeze. I envision they will probably want to roam less in the colder, wetter months, so the space will be valuable.
Thoughts? Picture because they are cute.