chickens are natural heat creating machines. it's true, my Sumatra's seem oblivious to weather in general. Personally, I think it is because we as people haven't messed with them too much. They are still pretty wild.
I do have 10 Sumatra's born this past summer that chose to live in the tin shed they were born in. 8 of them roost right above the door. I leaned in with the flashlight tonight, like I do everynight to do a head count, and as my head passed under the 8 of them, I felt heat. It was noticably warmer under and around them. I pulled my head away after a roo gave me the stink eye tho....
I do have 10 Sumatra's born this past summer that chose to live in the tin shed they were born in. 8 of them roost right above the door. I leaned in with the flashlight tonight, like I do everynight to do a head count, and as my head passed under the 8 of them, I felt heat. It was noticably warmer under and around them. I pulled my head away after a roo gave me the stink eye tho....
OK, no heat in the coop. I can't reach the fixture anyway....it's 7 feet up, mounted to a rafter.....but ray can reach it.
I don't cover my water at night in the heated bowl, but since it is thermostatically controled, I don't think it gets warm enough to evaporate in these temps. At least that's what I am telling myself, cuz I have no frostbite on anyone and one of my hens has a HUGE flopover comb. (kinda Donald Trumpish)
Of course the sand floor and poop is totally frozen so nothing is evaporating to cause humidity.....I am dreading the first warm day. I already have the sand in the coop to replace, what is going to be, sloppy, wet, stinky sand. (It's in bags, and the chickens enjoy standing on it to see out the window)
I need some Sumantras to keep me from adding heat. I know they don't need it, but I am freezing inside the house, how warm can the chickens be in the coop (where I still haven't closed the pop door?)
Stay warm, folks. Think "Spring"

