Here the problem is it is 32-34F one night and then 70+F the next day or so. So it is hard to acclimate to the switching all the time. I have a chicken stagecoach and I added padding to the nesting boxes and then hay on that. Then I put a heavy rubber type rug over the top and back of the nesting boxes when it is cold. I will add insulated fiber board to the new coops nesting boxes I am making from a playscape tower.
Only two girls in the stagecoach as I keep the 6 teenagers in a dog cage on the back porch and a space heater that comes on when the temps dip -- also a heat lamp at the back.
I think if it was -10 F, I would add a light or heat lamp or barn heater or something. Us Southerners don't do well with cold and I figure the chickens aren't used to it either. I offer warm oatmeal on a cold morning also. This keeps my layers happy as I perfect the perfect French omelet.
Only two girls in the stagecoach as I keep the 6 teenagers in a dog cage on the back porch and a space heater that comes on when the temps dip -- also a heat lamp at the back.
I think if it was -10 F, I would add a light or heat lamp or barn heater or something. Us Southerners don't do well with cold and I figure the chickens aren't used to it either. I offer warm oatmeal on a cold morning also. This keeps my layers happy as I perfect the perfect French omelet.
