Do it!!!
You should put the first part of the video in a loop (short).
Would be marvellous to see an endless stream of chickens jumping through the pop door.

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Do it!!!
You should put the first part of the video in a loop (short).
Would be marvellous to see an endless stream of chickens jumping through the pop door.
You're welcome to visit. Honestly, that sort of temp doesn't last all that long, usually no more than about a week....and the temp yo-yos all winter long....sometimes as high as 60⁰F (15⁰C)...and dropping back down to 20s (-1.6 to -6.6C) the same night. We get similar temp swings during the summer (lows upper 40s/low 50s aka 10⁰C) too.The chickens might disagree but I'd honestly like to experience that.
Closest I think I've come - which isn't very close, I know - is a few years ago when we got snowed in for five days (snow is unusual here despite the latitude) and I walked the two miles to the shop with my eyes closed most of the way because it was snowing heavily at 40-50mph. That was great.
I’m in the mountains of Western North Carolina, at about 2200’ (670 m.) altitude. My city is in sort of a bowl-shaped depression, surrounded by much higher mountains - one reason we were so hammered by flooding by Helene a year ago, pouring down off the heights. As a result, we live in a rain shadow, because the surrounding mountains catch most of the rain coming from any direction (so again, the flooding.) My county is the driest in NC, and Lake Toxaway, 45 miles to the SW, is the wettest spot in NC.I'm going to blow the whole winter discussion up now.
How cold? -40⁰. That's NEGATIVE 40 on either scale.
Wet or dry? Mostly dry, but at those temps, wind chill is a worse problem.
The coldest that I remember, from Vermont was -36, it was not pleasant, but it was survivable, the wind made uncomfortable. I like the cold, I just not that cold.I like the cold, so long as I'm prepared for it, and I find the wind invigorating. I'd like to know what those temperatures feel like and what it's like to live in those conditions.