Welcome New Folks!
I'm new here too. My first 3 hens are 10 months old now, and then I have a trio of almost 4 month old pullets, and a pair of 6-8 week old bantams.....and I'm sure I'll be adding more soon.
Question for some of you who live inland: I had a hard frost last night, and I was really worried about my big girls. I put a l00 watt lamp in there for a couple hours in the early evening, but they were so mad about the light, when it was supposed to be dark, that we just turned it off, and just closed the upstairs hatch where they roost at night, to try to keep the heat in, and let them get their rest. This morning, they seem fine, but I just don't want to anything bad to happen to them.
Since I've lived here, in the past six years, my normal lows for a cold winter night would be 27-30 degrees, but I've seen 19 degrees in that severe cold snap we had about 3 years ago. I have a Buff Orpington, and 2 Australorps outside, big fluffy birds, do I need to be worried about them?
My younger chicks come in at night (because I don't have a coop built for them yet
) and I'm thinking if I do get that coop built, I should definitely put a heat source in for them, since they aren't acclimated to the low temps yet this year.
I've read the thread started by an Alaskan, to NOT heat the coops, but my feed store says yes for cold nights..... What are your opinions?

I'm new here too. My first 3 hens are 10 months old now, and then I have a trio of almost 4 month old pullets, and a pair of 6-8 week old bantams.....and I'm sure I'll be adding more soon.
Question for some of you who live inland: I had a hard frost last night, and I was really worried about my big girls. I put a l00 watt lamp in there for a couple hours in the early evening, but they were so mad about the light, when it was supposed to be dark, that we just turned it off, and just closed the upstairs hatch where they roost at night, to try to keep the heat in, and let them get their rest. This morning, they seem fine, but I just don't want to anything bad to happen to them.
Since I've lived here, in the past six years, my normal lows for a cold winter night would be 27-30 degrees, but I've seen 19 degrees in that severe cold snap we had about 3 years ago. I have a Buff Orpington, and 2 Australorps outside, big fluffy birds, do I need to be worried about them?
My younger chicks come in at night (because I don't have a coop built for them yet

I've read the thread started by an Alaskan, to NOT heat the coops, but my feed store says yes for cold nights..... What are your opinions?