Northern coop insulation and ventilation questions, please share!

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Hi there latebloomer!

You in Northern or Southern VT? Either way I'm no more than 2 hours away!
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i'm in montpelier, grew up in underhill

these are my first four chicks
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i love them

i'm getting some more hatching eggs and going to set them this weekend

what's this chicken love illness called?
 
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Cute chicks! What breeds?

Did you go to MMU?

You must be some of my competition in getting free materials off craigslist in the area...
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they're bbs (black/blue/splash) orpingtons and the eggs that are on the way are the same

what do you have?

yes, i went to mmu, i graduated in the late eighties. did you go there?
 
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I dont' have any chicks yet, but have rhode island reds, rhode island whites, barred rocks and new hampshires (2 of each) coming at the end of April from L.D. Oliver Seed in Milton.

I did go to MMU, but graduated in 2000.
 
Regarding your question about insulating. I expect a lot of flack from this but IMO you don't need it. That's a nice shed, much nicer than the one I had my last coop in. Chickens don't need an insulated coop unless you're a lot colder than I think you are. I raised chickens in a portion of one of those "greenhouse" buildings built with 2x4 framing and sided and roofed with fiberglass translucent panels. Our weather was mostly about zero for low's in winter but occasionally colder. Wind, lots of it and show 1-4 feet depending on the winter. My chickens survived fine and layed eggs thru the winter. I had lights and water kept from freezing with heat tape and a small birdbath heater in the bucket. Now to describe my coop: It was in a corner of a 15'x30' "greenhouse" described above. The coop part (about 7 1/2' x 10' I paneled the outside 2 walls up about 4' with plywood. I did "insulate" behind the plywood with fiberglass insluation. The upper 4' of the outside walls I merely lined inside with feedsacks, no paneling. The other two walls were chickenwire only as they faced inside the building. On one of those walls I normally had hay stacked in the winter until it was used up. The other wall was always open to the building and the remainder of the building was never insulated. I did eventually replace the roof with metal panels. On the ceiling of the coop I layed used metal panels and cardboard on top of the ceiling joists to keep the chickens from roosting on them and to keep drafts off the chickens. There was a lot of air movement thru the spaces between the ceiling joists and the roof that provided ventilation. The "ceiling" over the chickens mostly kept the drafts away but allowed the "chicken" air to escape. Of course in the summer we had screened windows we opened to provide additional ventilation. Regards, Woody
 
i'd love not to use my rigid insulation for the chickens and use it on my house like i intended to do.

we had a few days in the ten to fifteen below zero zone, and one a couple years ago that was forty below.

still no insulation?
 
We insulated and we have been very pleased at the winter conditions in the barn and the coops inside that barn. We were very careul to use tuck tape and to have the panels properly installed over the insulation and vapour seal. You can see how we did that here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/web/viewblog.php?id=7693-Coop_Insulation

Now, we support a feral colony of cats, and we have no rodents. You must be very careful to install in a way that rodents do not nest in the walls, or insects, for that matter. Tuck tape is your friend!
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Thanks! Helpful pics, I think we will insulate, but may wait until later this year when we've had a chance to save some $ and materials.
 
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I'm just worried that our coop will be too cold in the winter without something. Since we cannot get electricity out there I can't install lights (other than solar) or use any electricity to keep the water thawed. We get a lot of snow and wind, we had a snow storm less than 2 weeks ago where we got 30" of snow, we are in a snow belt. We get cold, windy and snowy weather from November-March.
 

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