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Think it's too cold for your chickens? Think again...

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This is exactly why I'm holding off as long as I can. We get hurricane-force winds routinely, and lose power often. I don't want them to be acclimated to even 35-40*F when it's 35-40*F BELOW. Power goes out, that could be an 80* drop within minutes. I KNOW they won't be able to handle it. I have 4 separate buildings... I cannot afford to heat them all if I wanted to, so I'm glad that they are doing well. It is currently -5*F, and a handful of chickens are still sitting outside at 9pm. With all the birds in the coop, it is a balmy 30*F inside, and everyone is quite cozy. My heat of choice is more chicken-bodies.
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It's ultimately your choice if you heat or not. I just wanted to let newbies know that they don't have to panic when the temps drop below freezing, because the birds will be fine. Over the last 3 years I've seen a lot of posts about coop fires... we've had our own close-calls, with lamps accidentally dropping down and starting to char shavings, or hens burning the feathers off their back because they sat directly under the lamp and got too close. Infrared lamps can literally cook your birds, so just be safe. Be aware of dust levels, and make sure there's good ventilation for the moisture that will build up. Be safe.

I will continue to post about our conditions and how the birds are doing as our Winter progresses. You can see what breeds I have in my signature. For a little background info... I have a layer coop (insulated, but ventilated) that has roughly 70 miscellaneous breeds, young (4 mo) and old (3 years) and roosters. I have a hoop-pen covered with tarps that house my growing turkeys and pheasants and a couple of miscellaneous chickens. I have another hoop-pen covered with a tarp with a small house attached (about the size of an outhouse) with ~ 20 mallards. And the 12x20' breeder coop (insulated and ventilated) that is mostly empty right now... 10 Orpingtons (young) 2 Millies, and 3 silkies and a bunch of quail. So far the only birds with heat are two Millie roosters that are about 3 months old and are so small that their body mass can't keep them warm yet. It's only a 60w bulb, directly above them on the cage, but the room still falls below freezing. They're fine so far.
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I have to add that Tori's chickens are much cozier than mine are, I only have about 35 chickens, split into two coops and both coop only are 5-10° warmer than outside temps. However, the coop that allows the chickens to go outside is never closed, their pop door is always open and they come and go as they please... I don't see any hunched up poofed out chickens, and I'm getting 8-12 eggs a day from the current 12 that are laying.

To be honest I am more worried about the closed in coop even tho it's usually the 8-10° warmer than outside, it's not as well venilated, and I can tell. The window (that doesn't open) is glazed with frost. I use 2x as much DE in this coop to keep it dry as the other one. But again, I'm still getting eggs and I don't see any 'cold' birds.
 
Yesterday and last night the weather here was windy, rainy, and just plain raw. Typical for New England this time of year.

our 6 chickens don't get to free range as often now because it's dark out when we get home from work. I got home early yesterday, so I opened the gate to their run to allow them to range in the rain if they chose to. They didn't hesitate for a second, and seemed oblivious to the weather. By the time they returned to the coop for the night most of them were soaked.

Normally we don't close the pop door on the coop, but it was blustery and temps were supposed to get to the low 30's, and since they were soaked I closed the pop door to block the wind. This morning at 6:30am it was 35 degrees outside. I checked the temp inside the coop when I went out to open the pop door again, it was a toasty 50 degrees.

There is no heat in their little 6 X 4 coop, only LED lighting, but it's well insulated. The amount of body heat they generate is truly amazing.
 
For all who don't heat Do you provide lights and heated water?? What happens when electricity goes with these?? What backup plans??
 
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They just do without the light and I have to haul water anyway so it's no big deal. I also have a light on a timer in the layer coop, but again, it's more for my own convenience so I can see in the dark (it starts getting dark at about 2:30pm now) and don't trip over a chicken. They don't NEED the light. If the power goes out, I have a head-lamp and other flashlights, and I just melt some snow/ice on the gas stove for wwter. We lose our water pump when the power goes out so we keep a backup of water in 1 gallon jugs. For extremely long periods of outages, we have a Honda generator, but it won't be used on the chickens.
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Seriously... if you don't coddle them, there's no reason to panic when stuff like that happens. It's kinda nice.
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I don't heat but do have a heated waterer. If the power goes out and the water freezes, I'll just keep replacing the frozen water with fresh until the electricity comes back on. No big whoop. I'm out to the coop a few times a day anyway.
 
Mrs. AK-Bird-Brain :

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They just do without the light and I have to haul water anyway so it's no big deal. I also have a light on a timer in the layer coop, but again, it's more for my own convenience so I can see in the dark (it starts getting dark at about 2:30pm now) and don't trip over a chicken. They don't NEED the light. If the power goes out, I have a head-lamp and other flashlights, and I just melt some snow/ice on the gas stove for wwter. We lose our water pump when the power goes out so we keep a backup of water in 1 gallon jugs. For extremely long periods of outages, we have a Honda generator, but it won't be used on the chickens.
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Seriously... if you don't coddle them, there's no reason to panic when stuff like that happens. It's kinda nice.
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My husband races pigeons and uses the "light system".16hrs of light to encouirage eggs/babies. So I wondered what you all did for lights up there.My son lived in Alaska for 4 yrs loved it!​
 
Mrs. AK-Bird-Brain :

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They just do without the light and I have to haul water anyway so it's no big deal. I also have a light on a timer in the layer coop, but again, it's more for my own convenience so I can see in the dark (it starts getting dark at about 2:30pm now) and don't trip over a chicken. They don't NEED the light. If the power goes out, I have a head-lamp and other flashlights, and I just melt some snow/ice on the gas stove for wwter. We lose our water pump when the power goes out so we keep a backup of water in 1 gallon jugs. For extremely long periods of outages, we have a Honda generator, but it won't be used on the chickens.
wink.png

Seriously... if you don't coddle them, there's no reason to panic when stuff like that happens. It's kinda nice.
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Yup that's my setup too.. lights on a times and take water to em.​
 
This was a pretty interesting read for me. I am new to chickens and have been worrying horribly because it has gotten down to 40degrees here at night. (I live in the Mojave Desert - yes I can feel some of you rolling your eyes - but have patience with us newbies) I was trying desperately to figure out how to keep them warm enough but after reading all this, I will assume that they are just fine. We did move them to a smaller house area so that their body heat would hopefully be enough to keep them all warm if huddled together. Thank you all.
 
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Mrs. AK-Bird-Brain :

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They just do without the light and I have to haul water anyway so it's no big deal. I also have a light on a timer in the layer coop, but again, it's more for my own convenience so I can see in the dark (it starts getting dark at about 2:30pm now) and don't trip over a chicken. They don't NEED the light. If the power goes out, I have a head-lamp and other flashlights, and I just melt some snow/ice on the gas stove for wwter. We lose our water pump when the power goes out so we keep a backup of water in 1 gallon jugs. For extremely long periods of outages, we have a Honda generator, but it won't be used on the chickens.
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Seriously... if you don't coddle them, there's no reason to panic when stuff like that happens. It's kinda nice.
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Never meant to sound like I was in a panic.Have had many critters over my 65 yrs.
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Just was interested how and what the reasons behind how things are done. We are on a well so if electricity goes so does the well pump what generators do you all us?? and yes I've hauled enough water thru frozen times to fill a large lake! Not my favorite thing to do.
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