No, no heater at all.Thanks so much. Wow. Honestly it seems counterintuitive to me, and will take some bravery on my part I think. No heater? Thanks for your help!

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No, no heater at all.Thanks so much. Wow. Honestly it seems counterintuitive to me, and will take some bravery on my part I think. No heater? Thanks for your help!
Do you have any pictures of your coop in winter?So what you want is to have them protected from wind while they are sleeping, as was said. This was super confusing for me at first, but 3KillerBs has some great diagrams that I wish I had seen before I built my coop.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/suggestions-in-re-these-ventilation-cartoons.1527692/
We only see -30 for a small stint each winter these days, but here is what we have done.
- Built a large attached run covered with hardware cloth and greenhouse plastic that a kind animal made us two "vents" in.
- Door from coop to run stays open all the time in the winter, and adds to ventilation.
- The two big south-facing, hardware cloth windows get greenhouse plastic in winter. We keep meaning to get around to plexiglass, we will someday. The doors that the windows are on have some cloth weather stripping in the cracks, which brings down drafts but still lets air through.
- There is a vent down below and up in the ceiling. I have heard of folks putting filters of sorts on these in the winter so air gets through, but not wind.
- We use supplemental heat if it goes below -10.
- We use deep litter, but it is a double edge sword. It adds heat and insulation, but it means there will be more moisture in there when it is cold. Moisture is the real problem.
The best thing I have found is to select breeds carefully, but it is hard to do that without experience. I can't tell you for sure what will work for you, but smaller combs have proved to be better for me. Some of the advice on "cold hardy breeds" I have found to be wrong, too.
@jthornton has a cleaned up PDF on this.https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sou...kQFnoECBoQAQ&usg=AOvVaw11TpCEbGP2vdSyGmhR4ovy
If you do an Internet search for woods open air coop, this is the PDF of the book that Mr. Woods wrote about building the open air coops.
I will try to get some up. My husband rebuilt the computer, and now it doesn't register anything that can bring photos in, and I don't have a cell phone because they barely work up here. That is a long way of saying it may take a minuteDo you have any pictures of your coop in winter?
Haha, yes, my husband wants to start a group called " Ohioans for global warming - because climate change is not enough". ( He doesn't like the cold, but he doesn't like the big bugs of warmer climate either)I will try to get some up. My husband rebuilt the computer, and now it doesn't register anything that can bring photos in, and I don't have a cell phone because they barely work up here. That is a long way of saying it may take a minute.
We based ours on the carolina coop, but put some of the vents in the wrong place for our climate. Live and learn. I needed those diagrams, but at least I know now for the next thing we inevitably build.
https://carolinacoops.com/chicken-coops/
If you do the open air coop, you will probably just need to find a way to slow the air down that is coming in in the winter, so it is just air and not wind, and won't hit the chickens. We feel forced into the greenhouse plastic since it gets so cold and windy here, but since it holds in moisture it is not ideal. Maybe canvas or something similar would be better for you. You can probably have some sort of window insert you put up in super low temps or wind chill nights.
I'll bet 10-20 years ago it would get to be -30 where you are. We used to see -40 a couple of times a winter. I know climate change isn't good, but I will take it.
I have all sorts: leghorn, speckled Sussex, smokey pearl, golden comet, Easter eggers, light brahma and black Australorp. We pretty much got one or two of each of the egg layers that the store had available. I'm pretty new, so I don't really know what breed I like yet. So far I like the personality of our white leghorn chicks.What breed are your chicks btw?
A similar coop in winterDo you have any pictures of your coop in winter?
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/notable-threads.75309/@jthornton has a cleaned up PDF on this.
Thought it was in his articles but couldn't find it.