eekay
In the Brooder
Good evening all,
I know this topic has been discussed to death. This is our first winter with the new flock of 4 Black Sexlinks, they are currently 10 months old.
I live in central Alberta Canada and this is the time of year we experience our usual run with the polar vortex.
Last night the temperatures dropped to -55C / -67F. For a brief few hours we were officially the coldest place on the planet.
I constructed my coop with 5" walls and R5 foam insulation. I've kept it as draft free as possible and I have 4 points of ventilation. (It holds at 43% humidity so I think I require more).
I do have a CozyCoop panel heater placed in front of the roost, wall mounted, set to the 200W setting.
So to toss my hat into the heat/no heat debate, would some consider -67F to be a reasonable temperature to provide this supplimental heat? We will head back into +1F range in a week or two and I plan on turning the heater off.
I'm fairly concerned at this point that they have not had a chance to properly grow in a proper layer of downy feather as I've had the panel running all winter.
Are there any immediate steps that anyone would recommend I take right now to avoid any kind of disaster?
Thanks.
Edit: For a baseline reference, at -67F, my remote monitor showed that the hen house did not drop below -8C / 17F, and that sensor is stuck to the wall in a far corner near the window. The temperature zone in front of the CozyCoop panel was likely higher. Should the power go out overnight they would definitely be in a word of trouble. Our ChickenGuard Extreme actually failed due to the cold and is likely bricked. When let out during the day the ambient temperature in the plastic sheeting enclosed run was -34C/ -31F and they didn't seem bothered by that at all.
I know this topic has been discussed to death. This is our first winter with the new flock of 4 Black Sexlinks, they are currently 10 months old.
I live in central Alberta Canada and this is the time of year we experience our usual run with the polar vortex.
Last night the temperatures dropped to -55C / -67F. For a brief few hours we were officially the coldest place on the planet.
I constructed my coop with 5" walls and R5 foam insulation. I've kept it as draft free as possible and I have 4 points of ventilation. (It holds at 43% humidity so I think I require more).
I do have a CozyCoop panel heater placed in front of the roost, wall mounted, set to the 200W setting.
So to toss my hat into the heat/no heat debate, would some consider -67F to be a reasonable temperature to provide this supplimental heat? We will head back into +1F range in a week or two and I plan on turning the heater off.
I'm fairly concerned at this point that they have not had a chance to properly grow in a proper layer of downy feather as I've had the panel running all winter.
Are there any immediate steps that anyone would recommend I take right now to avoid any kind of disaster?
Thanks.
Edit: For a baseline reference, at -67F, my remote monitor showed that the hen house did not drop below -8C / 17F, and that sensor is stuck to the wall in a far corner near the window. The temperature zone in front of the CozyCoop panel was likely higher. Should the power go out overnight they would definitely be in a word of trouble. Our ChickenGuard Extreme actually failed due to the cold and is likely bricked. When let out during the day the ambient temperature in the plastic sheeting enclosed run was -34C/ -31F and they didn't seem bothered by that at all.
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