Ejmaggz
Chirping
Hello!
So I adopted 3 chickens from a co worker (my first chickens) and they came with their own coop (sweet!) We are building a bigger coop in the spring to house all the incoming chicks I have planned, but I’m wondering, especially going into winter, how good is their coop now?
The coop is elevated off the ground (as seen in the pic) but it has a (sturdy) wire mesh bottom, so most the poop can fall down through the wire.
With it getting colder out (in the teens with snow) will this be warm enough for them? Should I add straw to it for insulation?
I worry about a draft. They have 2 little wire windows a little above their roosting bars, for ventilation, is this enough? Will it also cause a draft?
I’m planning on keeping this coop for meat chickens down the road, so I want to make sure I am doing right by my chickens now and in the future. I’d like to had a first story to it and make it a 2 story, to house more chickens. Any reasons not to?
Thank you everyone!
So I adopted 3 chickens from a co worker (my first chickens) and they came with their own coop (sweet!) We are building a bigger coop in the spring to house all the incoming chicks I have planned, but I’m wondering, especially going into winter, how good is their coop now?
The coop is elevated off the ground (as seen in the pic) but it has a (sturdy) wire mesh bottom, so most the poop can fall down through the wire.
With it getting colder out (in the teens with snow) will this be warm enough for them? Should I add straw to it for insulation?
I worry about a draft. They have 2 little wire windows a little above their roosting bars, for ventilation, is this enough? Will it also cause a draft?
I’m planning on keeping this coop for meat chickens down the road, so I want to make sure I am doing right by my chickens now and in the future. I’d like to had a first story to it and make it a 2 story, to house more chickens. Any reasons not to?
Thank you everyone!