XanderWiFi
Songster
I've told my wife and mother we are doing the right things, I suppose I need a little reinforcement myself. With the western fronts moving in it has been chilly the past few nights-currently 13 degrees. I just want to ensure I am not missing anything and doing right by my gals-who are definitely used to the 20-30s range of temperature, and hopefully doing okay with this recent dip and windchill.
Our coop is a very nice amish made, with roof soffitts and seals quite nicely with all the doors and windows closed. The roost is flat 2x2s-I know flattened 2x4 is the recommended but it is what came with the coop. I have about two feet of clean bedding for them to get down into if needed as well. The ventilation is roof soffitts.
The top layer of water began freezing every hour or so. Following the instruction video posted previously, I ran a 60w bulb through the middle of the cinder block their water tub rests on. Seemed to do the trick. I keep their food topped off and whipped up some hot oatmeal and steak scraps for them to get some hot chow in their bellies.
All that said, they are cold, I can tell. The leghorns are puffing themselves into poof balls and only standing on one foot at a time (at times). Combs staying pretty red overall. My EE, red comet, and polish hens seem largely unaffected as they move around. Many parts of the day I see them sheltering under the coop huddled together. Some go back inside the coop which makes a bit more sense.
I know they are hardy creatures. Is there anything I may be missing? What are the common signs of frostbite and hypothermia in these guys?
Our coop is a very nice amish made, with roof soffitts and seals quite nicely with all the doors and windows closed. The roost is flat 2x2s-I know flattened 2x4 is the recommended but it is what came with the coop. I have about two feet of clean bedding for them to get down into if needed as well. The ventilation is roof soffitts.
The top layer of water began freezing every hour or so. Following the instruction video posted previously, I ran a 60w bulb through the middle of the cinder block their water tub rests on. Seemed to do the trick. I keep their food topped off and whipped up some hot oatmeal and steak scraps for them to get some hot chow in their bellies.
All that said, they are cold, I can tell. The leghorns are puffing themselves into poof balls and only standing on one foot at a time (at times). Combs staying pretty red overall. My EE, red comet, and polish hens seem largely unaffected as they move around. Many parts of the day I see them sheltering under the coop huddled together. Some go back inside the coop which makes a bit more sense.
I know they are hardy creatures. Is there anything I may be missing? What are the common signs of frostbite and hypothermia in these guys?


