Raptor Chickens Coop Build Starts....

Now its official...


20221024_181646.jpg
 
And on the feeder/water issue I'm thinking of either hanging the ones you can see in the above picture from chains in the coop, or possibly doing a PVC pipe thing I've seen others do online.

It basically consists of getting fairly long piece of 3" pipe and putting a like a 90* bend on the end, then strap them to a wall.

What are "the flocks" thoughts?
 
And on the feeder/water issue I'm thinking of either hanging the ones you can see in the above picture from chains in the coop, or possibly doing a PVC pipe thing I've seen others do online.

It basically consists of getting fairly long piece of 3" pipe and putting a like a 90* bend on the end, then strap them to a wall.

What are "the flocks" thoughts?

We tried this with the in-town flock.

It worked very well until winter came. It passed the first few mild frosts, but the first time it actually froze overnight the nipples all blew out. :(
 
We tried this with the in-town flock.

It worked very well until winter came. It passed the first few mild frosts, but the first time it actually froze overnight the nipples all blew out. :(


I was just thinking about leaving the mouth of the pipe open, like I've seen online. It would probably take a combination of a 45* and 90* bend. And then for the water in the winter wrap it with some type of insulation and use "warm" water.

Kind of something like this.

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Charlotte-Pipe-3-SCH-30-THINWALL-1-4-BEND-STREET/1002790080
 
I was just thinking about leaving the mouth of the pipe open, like I've seen online. It would probably take a combination of a 45* and 90* bend. And then for the water in the winter wrap it with some type of insulation and use "warm" water.

Kind of something like this.

https://www.lowes.com/pd/Charlotte-Pipe-3-SCH-30-THINWALL-1-4-BEND-STREET/1002790080

I can't say how that would work.

I just know what happened to ours the first time it really froze overnight that winter rather than just had a touch of frost. The pipe didn't crack, the nipples blew out. :(

Those were vertical nipples, which may be more vulnerable.

I've had a rim of ice in the buckets with the horizontal nipples without the nipples being damaged, but I've never had a bucket freeze solid so I don't know what would happen in that case. We didn't try a pipe system again after having lost the investment in materials and labor that first winter-with-chickens. :)
 
I was just thinking about leaving the mouth of the pipe open, like I've seen online. It would probably take a combination of a 45* and 90* bend. And then for the water in the winter wrap it with some type of insulation and use "warm" water.
If it can freeze where you are, I would not use a pipe for water.
 

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