Quote:
If I were the one taking care of it on a weekly basis, wood/vinyl would be ideal.
What I'm stuggling with now is:
1. Thermal mass properties of concrete, in a climate with a cold Winter.
One of the downstairs bedrooms in our house has just such a wood/vinyl floor. There is not a full basement and the cold air gets underneath. The room is impossible to heat in Winter; I call it a 'Radiant Cold' system as the cold floor sucks the energy out of all objects in the room, including the bed and anyone in it.
2. The vermin that are gonna live underneath, and the bacteria in the crevices. What you can't see.
Will update this thread when I finally decide. And I'll keep reading; there is a real wealth of info here, though I have not yet found anything that addresses my two points above.
Cheers,
Rob
PS I don't have any real money for this project; however I do some side work and am willing to work extra hours to pay for the bags of concrete and mix them one by one in a wheelbarrow, if it will save heartache later and help keep the chickens warm. Other folks who keep chickens in our area have had them practically stop laying in the real cold weather, when a souffle tastes better than at any other time of year.
PPS Supermarket eggs are practically tastless---has anybody else noticed this or is it just me?