Goldenwahintofboss
Songster
- Jun 15, 2023
- 110
- 285
- 113
Thanks. You answered my pressing question. I live in northern Canada. It's -45 some days here. Will just add a heater on those days. They have a heat lamp near the floor they can go to dry off rainy days. I think they like it. There are 15 in my coop now. W 4 nesting boxes. It's pretty cozy. Lots of ventilation but no drafts.I live in Canada, average winter temperature is -15C/5F some periods as low as -30C/-22F.
Chickens do not need any additional heat in the colder months. If you add heat and have an electrical failure your chickens can be severely impacted negatively as they are not conditioned to the colder temperatures.
our chickens should NEVER be closed in. Ventilation is the most important thing after feed/water. The ventilation removes moisture and ammonia that build naturally from their dropping and breathing. The ventilation should be designed to avoid drafts directly on the birds, if you can see feathers moving from air movement you have a problem.
There are tons of threads on proper ventilation here on BYC.
