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Wood buffers humidity peaks, to some extent. Because humidity from the air can absorb into the wood. In principle some can then migrate to the outside and evaporate away although I dunno how significant that amount really is. Main thing is helping handle temporary humidity spikes, like a warm humid January thaw day, or a waterer spill. This is why I'm really not big keen on the idea of a vapor barrier in the coop. OTOH I will admit that it is not a *huge* difference, and it's not like your chickens will curl up and die if you have vinyl or a vapor-barrier on your interior surfaces.
Wood buffers humidity peaks, to some extent. Because humidity from the air can absorb into the wood. In principle some can then migrate to the outside and evaporate away although I dunno how significant that amount really is. Main thing is helping handle temporary humidity spikes, like a warm humid January thaw day, or a waterer spill. This is why I'm really not big keen on the idea of a vapor barrier in the coop. OTOH I will admit that it is not a *huge* difference, and it's not like your chickens will curl up and die if you have vinyl or a vapor-barrier on your interior surfaces.
I am trying to figure out just how warm a coop has to be in the winter to keep the chickens happy.
It averages in the mid 20's to mid 30's here in Jan and Feb.
Will a small wood coop be warm enough for the chickens? There is no insulation in it but it is pretty tight other than the vents.
Coop is 4x 6 and only about 4 feet tall. Made of 3/4" plywood and siding with shingled roof.
Can the birds live in something like this in the winter?
Sure. It's still a lot easier to manage a full-sized walk-in coop, but yours is not tiny and should be perfectly useable, especially since (if those are your NIGHTTIME temperatures) it isn't getting real cold where you live. No problemo
Good luck, have fun,
Pat
It averages in the mid 20's to mid 30's here in Jan and Feb.
Will a small wood coop be warm enough for the chickens? There is no insulation in it but it is pretty tight other than the vents.
Coop is 4x 6 and only about 4 feet tall. Made of 3/4" plywood and siding with shingled roof.
Can the birds live in something like this in the winter?
Sure. It's still a lot easier to manage a full-sized walk-in coop, but yours is not tiny and should be perfectly useable, especially since (if those are your NIGHTTIME temperatures) it isn't getting real cold where you live. No problemo
Good luck, have fun,
Pat
