So Glad I Found Ya'll!

Debbie Sue

In the Brooder
Joined
Feb 17, 2026
Messages
3
Reaction score
9
Points
11
Hey Ya'll ! Thank you for letting me join ! I live on 25 acres. My husband and I "share spaces- he works on tractors, I have chickens ( and turkeys,,and peacocks). I have -ABOUT 30 hens, a variety of breeds. I have been very thankful for not having anything severe happen to any of them in the last 10 years. I ALWAYS look for information, opinions of other people on things to do to keep my flock healthy. They are free range. They go in each night on their own , ( well, with the help of my "shadow", Jack.) He is part heeler,border collie and australian shepherd). Ilive in Texas, so our winters are not very bad, but I DO wrap my main coop with plastic,leaving air space in each side for ventilation. My coop is aprox. 20 X 60. but I only wrap 20X20, the rest is fenced in. I do NOT use heat,even when we had sub zero temps. As long as they are out of drafts. How does anyone else keep them protected from the elements?
 

Attachments

  • chicken house.jpg
    chicken house.jpg
    103.6 KB · Views: 6
Welcome, we are glad you found us too.

You are definitely attentive to the well-being of your flock. Having kept flocks in multiple locations with weather much more severe than what your climate is, I can tell you we have never used any heat sources in our coops, in fact most have been without any electricity at all so it would have been quite difficult to provide heat. Chickens are actually very well suited for cold, much more than they are for heat. Provided a well-ventilated but draft free area in which to use their natural insulation they can comgoryably weather temperatures well beyond what most people think would be comfortable
 
Welcome to the BYC...we are also glad that you found us and joined this forum. I have a flock of about 50 chickens and 7 ducks...and I have a few that have suffered frostbites this winter, but all have made it through the season thus far. Will try and address some of the issues that allowed for the frostbites, to begin with, this spring/summer.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom