My husband and I, total newbies to chickens, are going to drive the first nails in our new coop this week. (yea!) We know ventilation is really important, but I'd appreciate your advice if we've planned for enough. For our 4x6, 5' high house we're putting in:
A. built-in, all the time vents on 3 sides in the top 2 feet of the house. (The decorative wooden type we found at Lowe's.)
B. Wire mesh "windows" with wooden flaps we can open when it's warm and close when it's cold on 3 sides.
C. That space up where the top of the wall ends and the roof begins, meshed in.
D. Pop door
E. Husband suggested a "dormer" vent in the roof. His plan makes it sound like it wouldn't leak when it rains, and we could cover it in the winter.
Is this enough, or will we have a summer sauna? Is it just right, or will we have an arctic blast in the winter? As we're in western Washingtobn, both summers and winters are relatively mild, but we do have our hot and cold days. We plan on fluffy, feathery, cold tolerant breeds (Buff orpingtons, barred rocks, etc...)
What do you think?
--Nikki
A. built-in, all the time vents on 3 sides in the top 2 feet of the house. (The decorative wooden type we found at Lowe's.)
B. Wire mesh "windows" with wooden flaps we can open when it's warm and close when it's cold on 3 sides.
C. That space up where the top of the wall ends and the roof begins, meshed in.
D. Pop door
E. Husband suggested a "dormer" vent in the roof. His plan makes it sound like it wouldn't leak when it rains, and we could cover it in the winter.
Is this enough, or will we have a summer sauna? Is it just right, or will we have an arctic blast in the winter? As we're in western Washingtobn, both summers and winters are relatively mild, but we do have our hot and cold days. We plan on fluffy, feathery, cold tolerant breeds (Buff orpingtons, barred rocks, etc...)
What do you think?
--Nikki