So we have the 2 black bantam hens, one Easter Egger cross (she hatched out of a brown egg, but lays blue/green eggs lol), and a Buff Orpington cross (not solid buff, she has a number of dark feathers).
All are laying (got them in March).
Hubby built a beautiful little 4 foot by 8 foot coop, up off the ground so they can get under, the yard is fully enclosed. We have a triple wall polycarbonate window (leftovers from the greenhouse), internal nest boxes with an access door, the pop door and then venting the length of both long walls at the top of the walls, about 3-4 inches high, covered only in hardware cloth.
We had 40 degrees yesterday morning...and snow on the mountain tops Saturday morning.
The North wall is common with the garage's south wall. The vents face east and west. We do have a thermal block with a ceramic reptile style heater (screws into a light bulb fixture). And we have an LED bulb in there for extra light since at the darkest point in the year we get only about 8 and 1/2 hours of light.
I have some questions on the venting. The roosts are in front of the window, one at window height one lower. Should we block off the vents above the roost this winter? We can get to -45 though that's not common, but we commonly get to -25 or -30 with pretty high winds.
I plan to use straw bales around the base on the west side of the coop/run (remember it's up off the ground a bit) to help block off wind.
This is the wall that faces west. Roosts are at and below base of window.
Any other venting recommendations? Currently we have a small waterer inside for evening/morning/egglaying time, with a galvanized waterer and feed outside under the overhang on the east side.I'm going to do a couple of nipple water buckets that I can swap every day when they freeze up. I'm contemplating putting some feed inside on the coldest days, but would like them to be outside as much as they can in the winter. I'm also going to hang a hook inside with a rope/string to hang treats like cabbages and stuff from.
It's been 30 years since I last dealt with chickens in the winter...having only 4, I really don't want to lose any of them! Any recommendations would be welcome!
All are laying (got them in March).
Hubby built a beautiful little 4 foot by 8 foot coop, up off the ground so they can get under, the yard is fully enclosed. We have a triple wall polycarbonate window (leftovers from the greenhouse), internal nest boxes with an access door, the pop door and then venting the length of both long walls at the top of the walls, about 3-4 inches high, covered only in hardware cloth.
We had 40 degrees yesterday morning...and snow on the mountain tops Saturday morning.
The North wall is common with the garage's south wall. The vents face east and west. We do have a thermal block with a ceramic reptile style heater (screws into a light bulb fixture). And we have an LED bulb in there for extra light since at the darkest point in the year we get only about 8 and 1/2 hours of light.
I have some questions on the venting. The roosts are in front of the window, one at window height one lower. Should we block off the vents above the roost this winter? We can get to -45 though that's not common, but we commonly get to -25 or -30 with pretty high winds.
I plan to use straw bales around the base on the west side of the coop/run (remember it's up off the ground a bit) to help block off wind.
This is the wall that faces west. Roosts are at and below base of window.
Any other venting recommendations? Currently we have a small waterer inside for evening/morning/egglaying time, with a galvanized waterer and feed outside under the overhang on the east side.I'm going to do a couple of nipple water buckets that I can swap every day when they freeze up. I'm contemplating putting some feed inside on the coldest days, but would like them to be outside as much as they can in the winter. I'm also going to hang a hook inside with a rope/string to hang treats like cabbages and stuff from.
It's been 30 years since I last dealt with chickens in the winter...having only 4, I really don't want to lose any of them! Any recommendations would be welcome!

