I started w/RIR's as a hardy cold weather breed. I added BO's as they are listed as well but I'm finding their combs are too large, especially my roo's comb! I then added GLW's but neglected to keep in mind even if they were young and dumb roo's I should have kept one of those instead of the Andalusian as his comb & wattles are far too large for our cold weather (4b type).
The geese haven't wanted to walk or be outside today as it was 19 below zero farenheit last night and got up to ? today (still too cold for their feet). The goose barn is not insulated nor heated, I use an electric heated water bowl (for dogs) as a base and fill a bucket that sits in the heated dog bowl. Had to do this as the low bowl doesn't work for ducks and geese, they just want to bathe in it.
The chicken coops are insulated and the water containers have a heat lamp to keep the water from freezing and provide light except when its cold like today. I exchanged those heat lamps for 13 watt energy saving bulbs that provide a tremendous amount of light and turned on the sealed, oil filled electric heaters on low to keep the combs & wattles from freezing.
My BO has frostbite on three points from last night so I should have kept an eye on the temps outside. The Andalusian roo has one point frostbit. I placed the water containers (plastic coffee cans) near the heaters and will manually turn off and on the light while its this cold.
I'll have to watch the temps outside and in the coops while watching the combs/wattles and may just turn off the lights and turn up the heaters because 14 eggs froze today before I collected them.
I'm not saying its colder here than anywhere else, but I do not appreciate allowing my roosters to suffer by my neglect even if I was the person in the kitchen all day. I should have checked last night before retiring for the evening even though I'd taken care of everything and it all seemed fine yesterday morning...the temp just kept dropping and I wasn't paying attention
The Black EE's don't seem to have a problem at all, they have a small insulated coop w/Eastern and Southern plexiglass windows for light and solar heat. Their water is below a heat lamp. The deep litter method works best here. It seemed too harsh to keep the ducks out in their uninsulated coop with no electricity today so I put them in with the Black EE's and will see how that goes...
The bantams are set up just as the other chicken coops but have an Eastern double paned plexiglass window for solar heat and light, the sealed electric heater on low and I am using a 25 watt lightbulb in their coop so the perch area and nesting box area are not brightly lit. I also have to be wary of overloading the fuse box/outlets with all these coops and the outside deck light, plugging in the truck.
In the banty coop I've got two more Andalusian's (hens) and I'm thinking any breeds LF or bantam cannot safely live here w/large single combs without heat so am looking at a revision of what I thought would be good, hardy cold weather breeds.
I am thinking rosecombs would be better, plump body shapes, possibly RIW's that I don't yet have, GLW's that I do have but no roo yet, and I like the bantam W's, too, Plymouth Rocks in LF and bantam, the RIR's in LF & bantam but breed for smaller combs and breed out the taller combs. Yet, I'm in love w/the D'Uccles and Silkies so those are the "hobby" breeds.
I've got to insulate the remaining coops asap this Spring while enlarging the pop doors for the geese. I'm also going to plan on getting a lot of straw bedding before next winter and stacking those bales for added wind and warmth insulation. I did not allow enough ventilation in my roll around coop (built on a trailer) the BO's are in and cannot decide if N/S or E/W should be ventilated as we do have a very harsh wind chill factor.
For the first time in my 53 years of life, I'm thinking the short hair weims, the chickens and I need to move a bit southward, get some sheep and live where we can grow some wonderful veggies in more than 3 short month's time when it sometimes snows and freezes here in July.
There are also a lot of good deals on Craigslist anywhere else than in Alaska...free geese in OR, buy a horse for $300 dollars...free ducks, too, and green grass lawns, not frozen rock or frozen sand/snow. Its like living on the moon here.