Plastic Waterers that lost their vacumn

superhornet

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10 Years
Dec 20, 2009
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Go to the local auto supply store and get the bulk gasket material. Cut the material to fit inside the lid. Make two of them and install. When you tighten the lid, the gaskets now control the vacumn and not the "O" ring--works good, last long time.
 
superhornet
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I quit those red and white waterers as they are too sensitive, algae forms easily here in the summer. I went to the dog waterer by Le Bistro, http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=7694849 and that has been the end of my algae and every other difficulty. Plus these clean up soooo quick and easy when I do that. I use the 1 gal size for 12 chickens and works great! They are available up to 5 gallons.
 
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Here is what mine looks like. They also make them with a removable top for supposed easy filling. I would STAY AWAY from that as that might lead to a potential problem with the loss of vacuum. Stay with the sealed container. It just fits into the watering bowl assembly exactly like the water cooler arrangement in an office. jmho

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Problem I had with this type waterer was the chickens perching on the edge (backwards) and fouling the water constantly. I now use one with a float that stays connected to the faucet via a high pressure hose. I keep a toilet bowl brush hanging in the fence next to it so that I swish it out real good and empty it. It refills itself and stays full. Cleanup is a lot easier. Of course my water is outside and we rarely ever freeze.
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I have one of those for my dog/cats. The chickens walk in it and manage to tip it over. After a couple of summer days me coming home to them without water - I gave up on that idea. I wired it to the fence and somehow they still managed to tip it enough that all the water ran out. A larger model might help, but dang they are so pricy!



For simplicty now I just use a couple of flat backed Fortiflex buckets in the yard on the fenceline, and one hanging on the chainlink coop gate. I use a double-ended spring hooks to hold it on the fence to prevent tip-over. It's high enough that they only stick their heads in, and I haven't noticed enough perching on them often enough to cause poopy water. I wipe them out with a washcloth put in fresh water every 2-3 days. The dogs, cats, and even wild birds also drink from them. No more gaskets or tipping waterers over and drenching myself, no more thirsty birds from spilling their water!
 
Slim and green stuff in water ? Tea spoon of OXINE AH in five gallons of water or one oz of clorox per gallon....
 
The "chickens walk in it".....it needs to be raised then. My waterer sits up on blocks and they reach it just like they do their feeder. Maybe on the ground/floor, they might abuse it but I have never had a problem with the waterer raised up. But chickens are different as the posts certainly show. This picture illustrates how I elevate the waterer. That may be the difference....maybe not. Just know that I have no difficulty with it or the chickens abusing it in a chicken manner.
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In their run and out where they range, I just fill a horse feeding bucket with water. The height is just right to reach over the edge nicely and they drink about an inch out of each day.
 
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