Duckworth
Songster
My Welsh harlequins are 23 weeks old and just moved outside full time last week. Overnight temps are currently in the fifties and sixties F and days are sixties to low nineties, now, but will be dropping with the approaching fall. We get a lot of winter days with highs in the teens and lows around or below zero. The really cold weather doesn't usually hit until after Thanksgiving (US), but we generally get several weeks when the temps don't go above freezing and local lakes freeze over completely enough to allow a lot of ice fishing.
I built the duck house with R10 dense foam insulation in the floor, lower walls and ceiling and hardware cloth on the inner side of the studs of the upper walls for lots of cooling ventilation in the summer, which can exceed 100F. My plan for winter is to insert insulation into most of the hardware cloth windows and cover it with plywood panels from the outside. There will still be ventilation between the roof and the top of the walls and I can add or close up ventilation by how much insulation I put over the windows. Any advice about how to strike the right balance between warmth and ventilation in winter weather? There is no electricity to my duck house, though I could run an extension cord for a heated dog bowl for water in the pen.
This is my newly completed pen and house.
I still have to trim out the back doors and put the roofing on, so it's not completely done, but at least the ducks are out of the house. I had an injury that slowed me way down getting the building done. The floor now has a full covering of pine shavings and straw. The low side door on the pen and the back doors of the house have no footers so that any water can run out and cleaning is easier. The pen currently just has a tarp screwed onto the rafters, but I am going to put hardware cloth over the rafters, then put PVC corrugated panels over it for shade and shelter from rain and snow. I'm also going to put welded wire rabbit fencing over the hardware cloth around the bottom of the pen to discourage our dogs from attempting to join the ducks in the pen. We have a variety of wild predators here, including raccoons, raptors, opossums and an occasional fox. Construction cleanup is slated for this weekend.
Thanks in advance for your help. I'm new at this. My husband is allergic to chicken eggs and duck eggs are hard to find here.
I built the duck house with R10 dense foam insulation in the floor, lower walls and ceiling and hardware cloth on the inner side of the studs of the upper walls for lots of cooling ventilation in the summer, which can exceed 100F. My plan for winter is to insert insulation into most of the hardware cloth windows and cover it with plywood panels from the outside. There will still be ventilation between the roof and the top of the walls and I can add or close up ventilation by how much insulation I put over the windows. Any advice about how to strike the right balance between warmth and ventilation in winter weather? There is no electricity to my duck house, though I could run an extension cord for a heated dog bowl for water in the pen.
This is my newly completed pen and house.
I still have to trim out the back doors and put the roofing on, so it's not completely done, but at least the ducks are out of the house. I had an injury that slowed me way down getting the building done. The floor now has a full covering of pine shavings and straw. The low side door on the pen and the back doors of the house have no footers so that any water can run out and cleaning is easier. The pen currently just has a tarp screwed onto the rafters, but I am going to put hardware cloth over the rafters, then put PVC corrugated panels over it for shade and shelter from rain and snow. I'm also going to put welded wire rabbit fencing over the hardware cloth around the bottom of the pen to discourage our dogs from attempting to join the ducks in the pen. We have a variety of wild predators here, including raccoons, raptors, opossums and an occasional fox. Construction cleanup is slated for this weekend.
Thanks in advance for your help. I'm new at this. My husband is allergic to chicken eggs and duck eggs are hard to find here.