- Thread starter
- #21
Jaeden Mckinley
Songster
- Apr 2, 2022
- 110
- 174
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I would love to see the setup.I use a 20 gallon clear plastic tote with lid with horizontal nipples and a deicer. It only needs filled once every 2 weeks.
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I would love to see the setup.I use a 20 gallon clear plastic tote with lid with horizontal nipples and a deicer. It only needs filled once every 2 weeks.
here’s an older picture. you can see he deicer plugged in for the winter.Yeah, whenever you have the time it would be great to see that waterer.
Not confusing at all, it looks like a very nice setup you have there. I bet it works well.here’s an older picture. you can see he deicer plugged in for the winter.
View attachment 3339531
i used a hole saw bit wide enough to pass the plug for the deicer through, and then plugged it with a plastic plug.
a standard plug works great for the summer. for the winter, i drilled a 3/8” hole through the center of a second plug, and used a utility knife to cut a slit to the hole.
if that sounds confusing, i can get better pictures for you.
That snow looks like a lot of fun.We use a heated horse trough we put nipples on since they won’t freeze. Seems to be working great! One of my Polish doesn’t get it and I take water out for her though.
The kids and dogs have been having a blast! The chickies and I not so much lol. I swear the house will be dry again… At least it’s convinced everyone to lay in the nest boxes though!That snow looks like a lot of fun.
I bought this last year for my first year with chickens and am very pleased with it. It handled a SW-PA winter just fine and is going strong at the moment.Hello! First time chicken owner here as well. So I can't really say from any experience. But I've done my research, and have found this waterer that I'm planning on using this winter. It has nipples, so there's no way of the chickens kicking dirt, dust, debris, or getting chicken poop in the water. And it's heated, so it won't freeze. The only issue being that you'll need electricity out there to plug it in. You'll need it though, otherwise the water will freeze, regardless of what type of waterer you end up using. If the water freezes in the nipples, it can damage the nipple causing leaks. And to me... A leaky waterer, is a useless waterer.
View attachment 3338818
When my chicks were in the brooder, I had them drinking out of a smaller bottle with horizontal nipples so that they would learn early. They like to play chase with a laser dot. Get them chasing a laser and get the dot on the nipple and they'd figure it out in no time.This morning my dad brought me to our local Runnings and we bought the farm innovators' Heated 2-gallon nipple waterer, The best part is I have silkies so I don't have to worry about the size of the waterer. Is it easy for the chickens to drink out of, how do they learn that's where the water comes from? Thanks for helping me.