Winterizing and Watering in S West PA

ByardK

Chirping
Jun 11, 2025
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Hi!

I am sure this has been discussed, so I apologize if so. We live outside of PGh and this will be our first winter with our chickens.

We have a pre fab coop from Tractor supply- I believe the sentinel. Anyway, how much insulation if any and donI need an electric heater? Sometimes it can get in the single digits and the wind chill below 0. It varies from year to year.

Also, food and water. Is there a way to water without electricity and prevent it from freezing? I have read not to put food and water in the coop?

Looking for economical suggestions.

Thanks!
 
Hi!

I am sure this has been discussed, so I apologize if so. We live outside of PGh and this will be our first winter with our chickens.

We have a pre fab coop from Tractor supply- I believe the sentinel. Anyway, how much insulation if any and donI need an electric heater? Sometimes it can get in the single digits and the wind chill below 0. It varies from year to year.

Also, food and water. Is there a way to water without electricity and prevent it from freezing? I have read not to put food and water in the coop?

Looking for economical suggestions.

Thanks!
Can you verify which model it is, and the square footage? How many chickens, are they full-size or bantam, and how old will they be?

The danger for chickens in winter, even quite cold winters, is the buildup of moisture (from breath and poop) and ammonia (from poop) that occurs when they are stuck inside pre-fab coops with shockingly inadequate ventilation during bad weather. They can develop frostbite from the excessive moisture.

If the coop is properly ventilated and dry, and NOT drafty, they shouldn’t need heating or insulation (they’ll try to eat the insulation.) After all, they’re wearing down jackets 24/7. @Ted Brown

Keeping water thawed is a challenge though. There is at least one informative thread going in the Feeding and Watering sub-forum. Good luck!

Edit to add: here’s a thread to start with, if you haven’t seen it yet: https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...r-100-chickens-in-40-with-wind-chill.1671357/
 
Can you verify which model it is, and the square footage? How many chickens, are they full-size or bantam, and how old will they be?

The danger for chickens in winter, even quite cold winters, is the buildup of moisture (from breath and poop) and ammonia (from poop) that occurs when they are stuck inside pre-fab coops with shockingly inadequate ventilation during bad weather. They can develop frostbite from the excessive moisture.

If the coop is properly ventilated and dry, and NOT drafty, they shouldn’t need heating or insulation (they’ll try to eat the insulation.) After all, they’re wearing down jackets 24/7. @Ted Brown

Keeping water thawed is a challenge though. There is at least one informative thread going in the Feeding and Watering sub-forum. Good luck!

Edit to add: here’s a thread to start with, if you haven’t seen it yet: https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...r-100-chickens-in-40-with-wind-chill.1671357/
The girls just started laying this past week. There are currently 3, and I have attached a pic of the coop.
 

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Cute structure, not so good as a coop. Actual dimensions? Do you have it on a concrete base, or a wide hardware cloth skirt, or some way to keep digging predators out?
How well is the hardware cloth attached, and how good are those latches? Picture two big dogs attacking it, or a nice big raccoon tearing at it. Most of us have started with coops that need help to be safe, and we learn the hard way.
I don't see any actual ventilation except for that cute little opening up top. Is that it? Two to three square feet of upper ventilation is recommended for three standard birds!
If you wrap the three leeward sides of your hardware cloth area, especially if you can leave the upper section of the 'run' hardware cloth open for ventilation, and have the chicken coop door open all the time, that should work pretty well. Consider the entire roofed area as coop, because then the size may work out for your birds.
Water in winter without electricity will be a pain, just sayin'. For only three birds, not so hard to carry fresh out there three times each day, having maybe two water dishes to swap them out.
Electricity! Safely done, well worth it. Also, without supplimental light at the coop, egg production will be poor when daylight drops below 14 hours per day. Your pullets might do fairly well this first year, or not, depending on their breed types.
Silkies need assistance in very cold or very hot weather, most 'normal' breeds do not. Birds with large single combs and large wattles may have some frost bite, really can't be helped, except to keep the coop well ventilated so it's not more humid than ambient.
Mary
 

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