JHH3
Songster
I have what is perhaps a silly question for those of you that live in very cold winter climates but it's my first year having chickens during winter.
My metal coop roof is covered in about 4-5 inches of snow, it only gets sun about half the day. Should I leave the snow on the roof as a bit of insulation for when it's cold at night to keep the inside from getting too cold or scrape it off so the sun can heat it up and perhaps transfer some of that warmth to the inside of the coop? Or would it be such a little difference that it wouldn't matter?
It's -8F outside right now, coop isn't heated so I want to leverage the sun as much as I can.
My metal coop roof is covered in about 4-5 inches of snow, it only gets sun about half the day. Should I leave the snow on the roof as a bit of insulation for when it's cold at night to keep the inside from getting too cold or scrape it off so the sun can heat it up and perhaps transfer some of that warmth to the inside of the coop? Or would it be such a little difference that it wouldn't matter?
It's -8F outside right now, coop isn't heated so I want to leverage the sun as much as I can.