Kentucky people

Hello Kentucky BYC,

In ~1 year, my husband and I are moving back east, likely to Powell Co, KY. We’ve spent 25 years in Rocky Mountain West, most of that at 7,600’. Thus, all of our chicken tending experience has been in the high and dry, with cool summer nights and long, brutal winter. I know we’re in for a steep learning curve when it comes to raising chickens in a hot, humid environment with plenty of critters.

I’m here humbly for advice. What do I need to know / learn about chicken tending in KY? Some of my concerns include:

1. Parasites: at my current elevation, we don’t deal with ticks, mites, worms, etc. Methinks I’m in for a shock in Kentucky. How do you keep your birds safe from hitchhikers (inside and outside)?
2. Wet weather: currently, we can go weeks without seeing a raindrop, and three days in a row of precipitation will be the talk of “downtown” Black Forest for a week or two. Do you have covered run space so your birds can exercise during prolonged rainy periods?
3. Predators: my current enemies are coyotes, foxes, hawks and domestic dogs plus black bears emerging from hibernation. Basically, as long as my run and coop keep bigger things out, my birds are fine. Our garter snakes struggle enough with grasshoppers and baby mice. I hear talk of raccoons, skunks, mink type critters and realize I’ll need to up my game. And snakes?!?! The thought of snakes in my coop is like something out of a SciFi horror movie. Go ahead and ruin my day and tell me all the new enemies I’ll face in Kentucky!
4. Heat: at 7,600, we complain when the temperature goes above 85° and fuss about humidity at 45%. Simply providing shade is fine my hens. How do you keep your birds safely cool in high heat and humidity conditions?

Enough questions for now. I’m open to hearing any and all advice you have to help us make a safe and comfortable transition to chicken keeping in your region. Many thanks in advance.

PS: Both of my grandfathers (RIP) were Kentuckians (Yatesville / Louisa and Cold Spring), and I’m quite familiar with Powell Co and vicinity, so this is quite a welcome “coming home” for me.
Don't worry about the snakes/rats or predators other than bears. If you're doing hardware cloth you're eliminating them. (I have hardware cloth on the bottom also, topped with cinder blocks so nothing can dig up, and flooding water can flow through. Always dry=doesn't smell) Make your coop/run big enough and with a roof over both(hawks!), so that all your chickens are happy when they have to be inside for prolonged periods. Rain, snow, floods, etc can keep them inside. Build that coop/run in the deepest shade you can find on the property. Chickens struggle with the heat far more than the cold. I have a fan running in the coop/run nonstop in our hot summer months. I freeze 16 oz. bottles filled with water and place them in their waterers, changing water several times a day in extreme heat. The chickens also have a foot bath available to help them cool off, they love standing in a few inches of water to cool off. I only do that in the coop part where there's sand, to eliminate chance of odors. The sand dries out pretty fast from the fan. They also appreciate A big chunk of cold watermelon on those hot days. Oh, forgot to mention open air coops instead of solid walls. You can wrap those walls in winter, but the most air flow they have, the better. Welcome to Kentucky, hope you love it as much as I do!
Ps. Your chickens will eat those ticks if you have them in your yard. Give them a few hours running around outside everyday.
 
Thank you for these details! I’m highlighting “heat and water” as two areas where I’ve really got to adjust my game. Whew. And yards and yards of hardware cloth. And thanks for confirming my assumption that the coop will need a fan. Man, living someplace for so long with cold, dry nights all summer long, we’ll need to get used to hot, humid nights and keep our birds comfortable. This is seriously hard for me to get my head around. I’ve spent a quarter century living in a place where sunset = grab a fleece and a hat and build a bonfire so you don’t freeze! 🥶

Snakes … I can’t stop obsessing over snakes. That one is a hangup for me, for sure!

I can’t wait to unload the moving van in KY. I’m dreading another winter here in CO, with a 4x4 tractor to move snow and my chickens waiting out October blizzards. I’m looking forward to tall, green trees, flowing creeks and streams, and that forest smell in the woods. 💕

Don't worry about the snakes/rats or predators other than bears. If you're doing hardware cloth you're eliminating them. (I have hardware cloth on the bottom also, topped with cinder blocks so nothing can dig up, and flooding water can flow through. Always dry=doesn't smell) Make your coop/run big enough and with a roof over both(hawks!), so that all your chickens are happy when they have to be inside for prolonged periods. Rain, snow, floods, etc can keep them inside. Build that coop/run in the deepest shade you can find on the property. Chickens struggle with the heat far more than the cold. I have a fan running in the coop/run nonstop in our hot summer months. I freeze 16 oz. bottles filled with water and place them in their waterers, changing water several times a day in extreme heat. The chickens also have a foot bath available to help them cool off, they love standing in a few inches of water to cool off. I only do that in the coop part where there's sand, to eliminate chance of odors. The sand dries out pretty fast from the fan. They also appreciate A big chunk of cold watermelon on those hot days. Oh, forgot to mention open air coops instead of solid walls. You can wrap those walls in winter, but the most air flow they have, the better. Welcome to Kentucky, hope you love it as much as I do!
Ps. Your chickens will eat those ticks if you have them in your yard. Give them a few hours running around outside everyday.
 
Rowan County here...about 15 minutes north of Morehead and near the Lewis County line. Love it out here - nice and quiet. We currently have 110 chickens, but many of them will be heading to freezer camp in the future. We have a layer flock, a meat flock (currently raising Delaware Broilers), and a bantam flock (which are basically pets). Anyone else in our area?
 
Just keep the tall grass and weeds away from the coop and you wont have much of a snake problem. Agree 100% with an elevated coop. Love mine. Easy to clean and care for. Plan on shade curtains for the west side of the run. Helps a lot with the heat. And ventilation, ventilation, ventilation. When you think you have enough add more.
Oh and the cicadas. I can't hear myself think right now for thr noise but the girls sure love them.
 
I especially appreciate the note about keeping the tall grass trimmed around the coop to keep slithering things away!
Thanks again!

Just keep the tall grass and weeds away from the coop and you wont have much of a snake problem. Agree 100% with an elevated coop. Love mine. Easy to clean and care for. Plan on shade curtains for the west side of the run. Helps a lot with the heat. And ventilation, ventilation, ventilation. When you think you have enough add more.
Oh and the cicadas. I can't hear myself think right now for thr noise but the girls sure love them.
 
Hello everyone! I'm looking to rehome my flock of 13 in London KY, I have another post on my page you can check out as well. Pick up only as I have no car, make offer, I can't really afford to say no. Hit me up and we can work out something.
 
Hello everyone! I'm looking to rehome my flock of 13 in London KY, I have another post on my page you can check out as well. Pick up only as I have no car, make offer, I can't really afford to say no. Hit me up and we can work out something.

I recall your kindness in answering my questions about adjusting to raising birds in east central Kentucky after we move from the Rockies. I’m still thankful for the ready advice from you and your Kentucky peers on this site. I can only hope and pray for the best for you and your flock and your family in this troubling time.
 

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