I have never added light to mine. Most winters mine do stop laying, but the past 2 warm winters, I have gotten a few eggs (probably from the new layers). I know some people that light for egg production, but not for heat. For just light you would use a regular light, not a red light. I have read in a few places that when you light your birds over the winter, they lay out faster than birds that are not lighted over the winter. Chickens are like women, they are born with all the eggs they will ever lay. So the faster they lay them the shorter the laying life is of that bird. I guess this is why I have had 2 birds still laying eggs at 10 yrs old, all be it, it wasn't alot of eggs. Good luck with your choice and yes check out the thread "think its too cold for your chicken, think again".Question for you all:
For those that light and/or heat your coops in the winter, have you started yet? If not, when do you start? I would like to provide enough light to keep my chickens laying during the winter and some amount of heat. I have a red heat lamp that I used when they were babies that I can put in the coop.
I just checked the sunrise/sunset times and I'm getting 13 hours of light now... (I read somewhere that they need approx. 14 hours of light to lay.) My nighttime low temps are in the low 70's this week, but are forecast to be low 60's next week. Mine are right at the age where I would expect them to start laying soon, so I don't have any already laying to use as a guage.
So.. this may be a 2 part question really (with one part being the light hours and one part being the comfortable temperature)... but ideally the solution would be for me to put the red heat lamp out on a timer so that it comes on at night.
Thanks in advance for any advice!