Where should I put my vents?

maroonandwhite

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New guy here and just completed (mostly) the coop portion of my setup. I went with the Purina 4x4 design with the exception of putting the door in the floor. I don't have the ramp built yet but you can see the general idea of what I have going from the pics. MY question is where should I locate two vents on the two side walls. Lower down under the nest boxes away from the roost or up higher. I figure I will do a 2x2 hole on either side with hardware cloth and a hinged door. That would be one square foot each for my 4 hens plus the venting around the top. Any advice is appreciated.

Also I will be redoing the perches with regular 2x4's across and higher up. Possibly diagonal in the corners.



 
Vents should be located at the top with hardware cloth for protection. Also factor in which direction the wind blows to maximize flow. Being able to cover them also would be a good idea if you have really cold winters.
 
I am just concerned about draft in the nesting boxes during the winter if I put them up higher. It normally doesn't get below freezing much here but it does occasionally. Would the "venting" in the top not be sufficient for the poop fumes and moisture to leave with a lower vent just helping it along? The egg box side of the box is facing west so the wind coming off of the big field behind my house should provide good flow through the coop.
 
If it doesn't below freezing much where you are then you should be fine with plenty of big vents. If you are worried about freezing, you can always cover the vents for the few frosts that you do have. I learned the hard way that it is easier to make vent covers than to add vents after you have completed construction.
 
Yeah I figure 2 2x2 holes should be plenty for this size coop. If not I can always go bigger I guess.
 
I've been at this about a year and continue to strugle yesterday to understand Ventilation, in response to another post yesterday

Ridgerunner wrote:

The difference between a draft and ventilation.

A draft is a breeze hitting them, especially on the roost. Think in terms of wind chill.

Ventilation is an exchange of good air for bad air.

With chickens you potentially have two different kinds of bad air. Wet poop can create ammonia as it decomposes. How much ammonia does poop create? That depends on how thick it is, how wet it is, and the temperature. Frozen poop will not create any ammonia. The warmer it is the more ammonia is created. Chickens respiratory systems are fairly sensitive to ammonia. They will die in lower concentrations that you would.

Ammonia is lighter than air. If there is a hole (ventilation) above their heads, the ammonia will not build up enough to hurt them. It will rise up and go out of the hole.

The other thing that can cause problems is moisture in the air. The higher the humidity in the coop, the more susceptible they are to frostbite. Many people on this forum have reported solving frostbite problems by increasing their ventilation. The moisture comes from their unfrozen poop and them breathing. You’ll never get your humidity below the outside humidity just with ventilation, but your goal should be to match that outside humidity. That’s the best you can do.

Warm air holds more moisture than cold air. Warm air rises. The chickens themselves generate some heat. In unusually cold weather the ground is likely a thermal mass and warmer than the air. If you have an elevated coop this doesn’t help air exchange. You’ll have to rely on the heat from the chickens. A hole (ventilation) above their heads will remove a lot of moisture. Two openings above their heads may cause a lot of air exchange and keep them out of the direct breeze between the two openings.

Each coop is different. We have different prevalent wind directions and different things blocking wind or tunneling the wind to the coop. I can’t tell you exactly what to do in your unique circumstances, but I’m a big believer in having lots of
ventilation above their heads in the winter and lots of ventilation below them, level with them, and over their heads in the summer.
 
Thanks cknkids! I will probably just do them low and close them up in the winter. The overhead ventilation may be enough for the winter.
 
So I have been reading and some recommend putting the "cross ventilation" vents on whatever sides the wind does NOT normally blow directly from. In my case that would be the front nesting box side on the rear door side. Is this a good recommendation? I was thinking of using some type of metal vent similar to a soffit vent on either side that can be closed and opened. Any ideas are appreciated. Thanks.
 

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