Winter in Wisconsin can be challenging for the coops. It is very important to make sure your coop is draft free yet it has good ventilation. If you put your hand under a sleeping chicken on a cold bitter night, you will feel warmth and dampness. They generate humidity and heat in Wisconsin. It is very important for high humidity regions to keep the coop dry. A damp coop can damage combs. We have windows in the peaks of the coops and they are left open a crack during the winter. We also have installed a natural air exchanger in the roofs. Fresh air flow is important.
We deep litter to help with natural heat. That little pile of leaves, straw, wood chips, and dirt makes its own microbial activity center for the chickens. They scratch threw it daily to look for goodies and help with stiring. When we clean the boards we simply add it to the dry litter to create a good bacteria factory and encourage good growths to keep the chickens healthy. If it gets too dry we add L.A.B.S. to generate and promote healthy growths.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/...e-easiest-way-to-deal-with-chicken-litter-dlm
To relieve boredom we hang fruits and vegetable they have to work and jump to eat them. There is less for them to do during snow storms and spend a great deal of time in the coop. Exercise is vital for good health. We have an emergency tote for the chicken filled with things we might need.



shoveled paths..the birds are out of the coops after i shovel..even in deep snow they find goodies by bushes and under leaves I have not raked.

activity strings

fresh herbs, straw and deep litter.

all three buildings are coops..that is a lot of snow to shovel..you can barely see the paths.
air exchanger on roof
Fresh water is important during the winter. They need liquids to generate heat. We have several heated water containers and a back up generator if the electricity goes out. I worry about water more than food. They can find all kinds of food in the deep litter, but no water. I keep extra containers of water available.
We deep litter to help with natural heat. That little pile of leaves, straw, wood chips, and dirt makes its own microbial activity center for the chickens. They scratch threw it daily to look for goodies and help with stiring. When we clean the boards we simply add it to the dry litter to create a good bacteria factory and encourage good growths to keep the chickens healthy. If it gets too dry we add L.A.B.S. to generate and promote healthy growths.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/...e-easiest-way-to-deal-with-chicken-litter-dlm
To relieve boredom we hang fruits and vegetable they have to work and jump to eat them. There is less for them to do during snow storms and spend a great deal of time in the coop. Exercise is vital for good health. We have an emergency tote for the chicken filled with things we might need.
shoveled paths..the birds are out of the coops after i shovel..even in deep snow they find goodies by bushes and under leaves I have not raked.
activity strings
fresh herbs, straw and deep litter.
all three buildings are coops..that is a lot of snow to shovel..you can barely see the paths.
Fresh water is important during the winter. They need liquids to generate heat. We have several heated water containers and a back up generator if the electricity goes out. I worry about water more than food. They can find all kinds of food in the deep litter, but no water. I keep extra containers of water available.