Northern chicken coop, heat?
#7913288
07/26/23 08:08 AM
07/26/23 08:08 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
|
I built a chicken coop and am going to keep chickens through the winter. Will I need to heat it in NW Wisconsin?
Steve WTA NRA
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913295
07/26/23 08:22 AM
07/26/23 08:22 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
|
Thanks K snow, how much ventilation does your coop have? Is it insulated?
Steve WTA NRA
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913297
07/26/23 08:30 AM
07/26/23 08:30 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
|
Thanks K snow, how much ventilation does your coop have? Is it insulated? Our old one had no insulation. The new one does. Condensation is an issue in the 20-40 degree range. If I rebuilt it, I would not insulate it. I have two vents up high, one on the east wall and one on the west wall. as well as the small door to the run on the south wall. The vents are 4x16. I'll try to get some pics later.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913300
07/26/23 08:31 AM
07/26/23 08:31 AM
|
Joined: Jun 2010
Ontario, Canada
slydogx
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jun 2010
Ontario, Canada
|
When I kept chickens, I did not run heat. I made sure the roosting area was not overly large so that when my 1/2 dozen hens roosted up for the night they were huddled together. Also, the coop was situated against a cedar hedge which managed the amount of wind exposure - this is important because you need to ventilate or the hens will get frostbite on their combs. I did this by cracking the sliding window on the sheltered side of the coop about a 1/4" at all times. I had a well meaning relative close that window up on a cold day and 2 of the birds were frost bitten within the 2 hours between her closing the window and me running outside to open it after she mentioned that she had closed it.
I never heated water. Water was brought out first thing in the morning and the frozen bucket was brought in to thaw/refill. The chickens were very aware that they had about a 45 minute window to get a drink because the next water wasn't coming until I got home from work 8 hours later. They are smart enough to peck a bit of snow if necessary.
Temps for me were generally in the high 20's to low 30's through December and then teens/20's in Jan and Feb with occasional stretches of extreme cold lasting 10 days at most. I don't think it gets a heck of a lot colder where you're at, it just gets colder earlier and stays colder longer.
Just happy to be here.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913303
07/26/23 08:41 AM
07/26/23 08:41 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
|
Lows where I live can get to -30 and can stay below zero for a week or more. Normal temps would be below zero at night and 20 for a high. Slydogx, did your chickens have access to outside all the time?
Steve WTA NRA
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913306
07/26/23 08:43 AM
07/26/23 08:43 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
|
Thanks Ksnow, did you protect your heat lamp? I like the covered run; mine is not covered.
Steve WTA NRA
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913307
07/26/23 08:44 AM
07/26/23 08:44 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
|
Lows where I live can get to -30 and can stay below zero for a week or more. Normal temps would be below zero at night and 20 for a high. Slydogx, did your chickens have access to outside all the time? I let mine have access outside all the time, that's where the water and feed is. They don't go out much when its that cold though. When I had water inside, I had serious condensation issues. I also give them straw and/or hay to walk on outside once there is snow in the run area.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913308
07/26/23 08:45 AM
07/26/23 08:45 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
|
Thanks Ksnow, did you protect your heat lamp? I like the covered run; mine is not covered. My heat lamp is in the coop, and I have half inch hardware cloth wrapped under it in case the bulb breaks. Don't want to burn the whole thing down. I also have about 10-12 inches of bedding in the coop. The aluminum sheeting on the run cost me a case of mountain dew and a few hours labor.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: pintail_drake04]
#7913311
07/26/23 08:49 AM
07/26/23 08:49 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
|
i put a stock tank de-icer in the water bucket, but other than that no additional heat. I personally know of 2 people that burned their coop down in the winter with heat lamps. Keep the draft off the chickens and make sure they stay dry, they should be fine. I try to run mine as little as possible. I do worry about the fire, and they cost a bit to run.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913317
07/26/23 08:52 AM
07/26/23 08:52 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
ND
MJM
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
ND
|
What you have for a coop, and how many chickens you have for the square foot will determine that. I built my coop with 2x6 walls, 1x12 ship lap on the out side covered with pole barn steel. 6" of glass in the walls 9" in the ceiling and water does not freeze sitting on the floor in a rubber tub. I have two windows and a glass door on the south side. Plywood sheeted inside painted white. It is 12x12 and has a 6 foot ceiling. I had 35 chickens in it last winter. It can get 30 below pretty easy and you may have a 20-30 mph wind with it. I have a window open about a inch and a half to cut down on moisture.
"Not Really, Not Really" Mark J Monti "MJM you're a jerk."
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913325
07/26/23 09:09 AM
07/26/23 09:09 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2010
Central, SD
Law Dog
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Central, SD
|
Insulated coop with a heat lamp in the winter 2 lamps in extreme cold. Roof vent gets plugged with a bag of insulation that comes out in the summer. Heated water in the winter I use 2X4s for the roosting bars VS round poles the 2X4s help cover the feet better from the cold. Roosts higher up to take advantage of the “heat rising “ fact dry flakes on the floor to protect their feet.
Was born in a Big City Will die in the Country OK with that!
Jerry Herbst
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: Donnersurvivor]
#7913326
07/26/23 09:09 AM
07/26/23 09:09 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2007
MN
160user
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
MN
|
Look into the "deep litter method". You can generate most of the heat needed with the birds and the manure they produce.
This has worked well for me with an uninsulated coop. I will change the bedding in late October for the last time until Spring, run a heat lamp and the water is in a crock pot set to "warm".
I have nothing clever to put here.
|
|
|
Re: Northern chicken coop, heat?
[Re: 8117 Steve R]
#7913329
07/26/23 09:15 AM
07/26/23 09:15 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
8117 Steve R
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2014
Wisconsin
|
My coop is 8 x 6 and I have 7 hens and a rooster. 2 x 4 studs and rafters with 5/8 T11 siding. Screened vents in the eaves and each end of the roof peak. I planned to cover the eave vents in cold weather. 3 sliding windows.
Steve WTA NRA
|
|
|
|
|