Why I heat my coop (An unpopular opinion)

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 68

  • @wakeupandhuman1800
    @wakeupandhuman1800 Рік тому +6

    After seeing that happy girl on your lap, it’s hard to deny that they don’t appreciate some warmth.

  • @rainbowconnected
    @rainbowconnected 7 місяців тому +5

    I've had chickens for 3 years now and had somewhat believed what everyone says that they are "fine" in the cold. Like you, my own observations tell a very different story. It never felt right to me and I've always worried when it gets really cold. Thank you for helping me trust and honor my own experience over "experts" on the internet. Sweeter heaters on the way now. I can just imagine how much happier the flock will be all snug and warm on their perches. If we bring beings into our care, we owe it to them to prevent suffering and give them what they need to thrive.

    • @naomipinckney
      @naomipinckney 7 місяців тому +3

      That’s what I’ve come to think as well. I felt terrible seeing their injuries sustained by listening to what others said I should do. I sleep better knowing there’s a some heat in their coops when it’s -20 at night.

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  7 місяців тому +2

      Thanks for sharing this! I think there are a lot of us out there who just know in our guts that so much of the conventional advice isn't right. It doesn't match up with what our chickens are telling us. And when you start looking into the scientific research that's been done on chickens, the backyard advice doesn't match up with that either. So glad you're getting a Sweeter Heater for your girls. They will love it!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  7 місяців тому +2

      Right there with you. :)

  • @JB-ChildOfYah
    @JB-ChildOfYah Рік тому +7

    I have a product similar for my cockatiels and my chickens. I live in TN and everyone says not to use heat because they don’t need it. I disagree!! Last year we had lows of -5 and many lost their birds. My chickens would otherwise be in the spare bedroom so the radiant heater is wonderful alternative for us. 😂 Love your videos!😊

    • @wayne2732
      @wayne2732 8 місяців тому +1

      I also live in TN, central area and last year, being our first winter with them, was stressful for all. Wrapping the run with plastic helped with the wind chill but wished we would have had the heaters. Though the heat lamps helped we felt it a little intense. Infrared use this year has made them much happier especially as they perch and keeps the coop dryer.

  • @coffeenciggy
    @coffeenciggy Рік тому +13

    Ex-researcher here. Love all your videos, please keep showing us your feathered lovelies! (Gosh I can't believe that there are people who believe that frostbite for any creature is ok...! ). Btw would you consider doing a video showing all the various hen and rooster behaviour/calls? I find that topic to be endlessly fascinating!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +5

      I hear you! I'm hoping sometime in our lifetime people look back at the way so many chickens are raised now and say, "How barbaric!" I've actually been considering doing a series of short videos called "Fowl language" that's all about chicken communications - both vocal and body language... Not sure when I'll actually do it, but it's an idea I've been playing with for some time. Glad to know you are interested in behavior/calls too - that's my favorite topic!

    • @77lases
      @77lases 7 місяців тому +1

      I would love a video on bird communication as well!!

    • @lidip8700
      @lidip8700 6 місяців тому +1

      This works be very interesting!
      We have a Speckled Sussex rooster that keeps tge flock in a tense state all the time. The hens definitely respond to his calls.

  • @ponpom1488
    @ponpom1488 Рік тому +5

    I always feed my chickens more in the winter as they burn more calories trying to keep warm. I also use hot tap water to warm their existing water source in the freezing cold mornings so they aren't drinking freezing water. Wood shavings are good for bedding warmth too.

  • @VeryButton72
    @VeryButton72 Рік тому +12

    Oh my goodness! Who wouldn’t heat their coop on the off chance that the electricity might go out? Do they also not heat their home so that THEY will be acclimated to the cold when the electricity goes out?? Poor chickens! I totally agree with Pearly! I am shocked that people elect not to provide basic care for the animals in their charge. I have two chicken coops. BOTH are heated and it is VERY clear that the chickens appreciate the warmth. Thank you for your chicken videos. I love them!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +4

      I like the way you think, Sam! I wish more people viewed heat as basic care...

  • @PracticingLiberty
    @PracticingLiberty 9 місяців тому +3

    Perfect soundtrack.

  • @skyegibbins3601
    @skyegibbins3601 Рік тому +5

    I lost my favorite 5 mo. old rooster, Buster, to the cold recently. At least I think that was the cause. He didn't seem happy outside, but I didn't see it coming :( I did go get a heat lamp with the protective grating after he died, but will check out the Sweeter Heaters. Even with just the one lamp, they all seem happier outside during the day. And I want to keep my 8 yr. old Buff (Buttercup) happy and thriving as long as possible! You put a lot of effort into this video - thank you!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +5

      I'm so sorry to hear about your loss, Skye. Poor buster! Chickens can be so good at hiding discomfort - I often don't know I have a problem until it's too late. At least your heater should prevent any further losses to cold. Sending hugs your way.
      Bri

  • @leanndavies7664
    @leanndavies7664 Рік тому +6

    I love your chicken videos. I’m from Michigan and I had most of my chickens molted in December and January . I used the cozy coop heater but next winter I’m trying the Sweeter heater. It gives me peace of mind to know my chickens aren’t suffering out there. I also enjoyed your videos on sand in the coop/run. It helped me pick the right sand out and save lots of money on bedding. Thanks for all the great information ! :)

  • @cherylkovalik1983
    @cherylkovalik1983 Рік тому +5

    I just recently heard of someone whose whole flock died by freezing to death overnight. If I lived in a cold climate, I would definitely use these heaters. I just can't get over the cruelty of letting chickens freeze to death. We used the radiant heaters for our ducklings and our easter egger chicks and they loved them! I loved how much safer they are than the dreaded red bulb lights. I even threw in a low-wattage seed starting mat, covered with a cloth, for them to sit on, which they also loved!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +3

      Thanks for sharing this, Cheryl. The seed mat is a great idea! I'm with you on the cruelty aspect - I don't understand it either.

    • @cherylkovalik1983
      @cherylkovalik1983 Рік тому +1

      @@thefeatherbrain Thank you for all the great information. I have learned so much watching your videos and reading your blog. I appreciate you and so do my girls🐔❣

  • @mariejankowski9894
    @mariejankowski9894 9 місяців тому +3

    Thank you so much for this! This is my first year as a chicken keeper and I want to do what’s best for my chickens. We had -40 F days last winter, so for sure I’m getting the Sweeter Heater!!

  • @GraphicallySpeakingMimi
    @GraphicallySpeakingMimi Рік тому +6

    I have a sweeter heater in my coop too. We rarely get snow in the south but we just had a week of temps in the single digits, not counting the wind chill and even though it does not put out a lot of heat, it did make a difference in the overall temp in the coop. We are back to normal winter temps now so I have unplugged it as they don’t need it. However, when it was 4* to negative 4* even during the day, I knew I had to do something. We all slept better at night. My girls don’t have combs or large waddles (EE’s &Americaunas) so I didn’t worry about frost bite but they def spent more time during the day in the coop. They didn’t seem to have any problem at all with the new coop addition. I guess they were just too cold to care.

  • @adaywithaleks6556
    @adaywithaleks6556 8 місяців тому +3

    I don't blame her I love the snow but that weather and those temperatures for snow to fall are plain miserable! 😅

  • @11lindemann
    @11lindemann Рік тому +4

    Thank you for all of your great information. I’m a newbie and have learned so much from you. Glad you’re back!

  • @yzettasmith4194
    @yzettasmith4194 Рік тому +4

    If a person had a south facing slope, they could build their coop nestled into the hill plus have part or all of the front glass or clear plastic for solar gain. Also burying a pipe 6-8 feet in the ground to let the consistent 58 degree temp come to the surface would regulate the temp year round. It wouldn't be as snug as the sweeter heaters, but it would be better than bare tin coop with nothing...if people don't want to run electricity to their coop. The usual about predator proofing applies. The materials could be scavenged to save money. I'm a nerd about anything that gives an obscene gesture to the power company. :)

  • @ECole-le7we
    @ECole-le7we 10 місяців тому +4

    Your videos about chickens in the cold are fantastic. I wish they would go viral in the chicken world!

  • @bubblytoes77
    @bubblytoes77 7 місяців тому +1

    I have 5 chickens and a small radiant panel. We had a cold snap so i decided to turn it on. I checked them right before and they were regularly roosted, and checked them 15 minutes later and they were all crammed closer to the heat source 😅. Mine loved it. We have some negative temps heading our way and our first winter so hoping the cozy coop panel is sufficient in staving off frost bite.

  • @wayne2732
    @wayne2732 9 місяців тому +2

    This is my second winter and I have added the infrared heaters and they are much happier

  • @lidip8700
    @lidip8700 6 місяців тому +1

    We always keep our winter coop at 40° because I just can't imagine allowing them to sit out there in a feather sweater!!

  • @chrism1452
    @chrism1452 Рік тому +3

    Pearly is such a beautiful bird! What a star!! I just ordered two Sweeter Heaters for my new chicken adventures coming in Spring! THANK YOU!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +2

      Perly knows he's beautiful too. That's why I let him get away with anything. :) So glad you're getting Sweeter Heaters! Your chickens will thank you!
      Bri

  • @homeatlaska
    @homeatlaska Рік тому +2

    Ooomigosh, Perly. 😂 What a funny chicken! Love your videos, Bri!! Thank you for this information... we definitely have some chilly fluffy buns right now. I've got a chicken I need to send you a clip of. She makes a call I can only describe as, "MOOOOM!! MOOOOOOOOM!!!!!" Clearly, she's a momma's girl, and a bit needy. Been trying to cut the cord, so to speak, but I just want to make sure she's not saying something else entirely, like, "DAD!! DAAAAAAD!!!"

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +2

      Lol! That sounds hilarious - would love to see her calling for you. :)

  • @es7614
    @es7614 Рік тому +1

    Great info (and timely!) THANK YOU

  • @tinab7791
    @tinab7791 Рік тому +2

    I need to get better about leaving comments before the video is over. I'll incorporate one of these into the coop we're getting ready for our chicks next month.

  • @bobschallalcs584
    @bobschallalcs584 Рік тому +3

    we do not have a lot of days that stay under freezing but if it going to stay below 40 degrees for more than 24 hour i place oil filled heaters and set it where the coop stays at 50 - 70 degrees with the chicken door open 50 degrees and locked at night at 70 degrees and move all the chickens in to the heated coop

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому

      That sounds wonderful, Bob. Maybe I should look into doing that. Have you ever had any problems with that type of heater?

  • @catlinhollow
    @catlinhollow Рік тому +2

    The cost to run those all winter long is probably prohibitive for most back yard keepers.

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +4

      I actually have that number! I have a separate power hook-up on my property for a potential future RV - that hook-up comes with its own power bill. Right now, the only thing that's powered by that hookup is 2 large sweeter heaters (you can see them in my largest coop in the video). Those 2 large Sweeter Heaters are on 24/7 in the winter months and the electric bill for that is $25/month. Well worth it for chickens' health and comfort! Of course, this will vary by state - for example, I live in Southern Idaho now and power is considerably more expensive than when I lived in Southwest Montana, but still, $25/month for two large heaters 24/7 is NOT prohibitively expensive for most people. If that's too much for you, then just plug them in at night when your chickens need them most! And if you only need one heater, cheaper still!

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  Рік тому +6

      And actually, now that I've just reviewed my electric bills for that hook-up, even in the warmer months, when the Sweeter Heaters aren't plugged in (and so NOTHING is drawing power), my power bill is still $5, just for the existence of the hook-up. So that means the 2 large sweeter heaters are only costing me about $20/month, not $25.

    • @catlinhollow
      @catlinhollow Рік тому +1

      That's good information to have. Perhaps mention it in a future video.

  • @jessicavb940
    @jessicavb940 Рік тому +3

    Do the sweeter heaters that attach to the wall vertically instead of hang overhead work the same way and are they just as affective in keeping the chickens warm.???

  • @Brennan_huff
    @Brennan_huff Рік тому +1

    Got me some sweeter heaters. Good ad lol

  • @stephaniemckown7489
    @stephaniemckown7489 Рік тому +3

    We just finished building our first coop. We insulated all 4 walls and the roof. Would it still be necessary to put a heater in? I just see a lot of coops with no insulation.

  • @darlenebell2345
    @darlenebell2345 9 місяців тому +1

    Enjoyed your video, I am fairly new to raising chickens, this is my 3 year. I had my first broody moma chicken who hatched out 10 chicks We put moms and baby chicks in brooder with heat lamp. It is November17 and the chicks are10 days old, I know they will out grow our brooder they are in now so I'm trying to figure out something for moma hen and baby chicks with winter coming on. I live in Kentucky and the weather is all over the place, 60 in the day and 30s at night. Any ideas for my new chicks and Moms hen would be appreciated thanks for all your advice😊

  • @mariahmoosymoose470
    @mariahmoosymoose470 Рік тому +3

    What would be alternatives to providing heat?
    Here in Montana where I live the wind and even below freezing cold temps can knock out power for sometimes hours to days even a week on end
    I mean if it came to that I’d make sure the coop is winterized before winter hit and provide bedding to keep warm
    But just curious

  • @sylvieroy3751
    @sylvieroy3751 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for all your videos ❤I have questions, in winter time if it’s more warm inside the coop…when they go outside they have contrasted weather and they are not use to it, and then they have a reaction from cold no? ❤

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  9 місяців тому +2

      I've found that mine do better in the cold outside when they are able to warm up inside under the Sweeter Heaters when they need to. Before my coops had sweater heaters, the chickens spent a lot more time puffed up inside the coop, not wanting to go out. Now, they spend more time being active outside during the day. The Sweeter Heaters are especially nice at night when temperatures drop A LOT. You could always just run your Sweeter Heaters at night - that's always an option.

  • @barbarawalker3620
    @barbarawalker3620 Рік тому +1

    🥶👍👍👍

  • @adaywithaleks6556
    @adaywithaleks6556 8 місяців тому +3

    What temperature about would you start using these heaters in the winter? Here In Oregon our coldest months are January and February and the temps are usually 30s and 40s then I believe.

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  8 місяців тому +4

      It completely depends on how my birds are acting. At a minimum, I recommend plugging them in whenever the temperature approaches freezing (to avoid frostbite). I usually end up plugging them in when it's warmer, though - for me, in October - when temperatures are in the 40s-50s during the day simply because I have a lot of molting chickens then who shiver like crazy and look miserable without them.

    • @adaywithaleks6556
      @adaywithaleks6556 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@thefeatherbrain Thank you! I really appreciate it as I was curious and couldn't find info on the temps lol 😅

  • @quaileggsvermont
    @quaileggsvermont 9 місяців тому +2

    I wish the piece was not so high!!

  • @MyNeighborsaJackAss
    @MyNeighborsaJackAss 7 місяців тому +1

    Have you thought of putting gloves on their feet for the snow? They’d probably like it!😊

  • @Motherroadcustoms
    @Motherroadcustoms Рік тому +1

    I got a large Sweeter heater after watching this.

  • @aleksandrap2364
    @aleksandrap2364 11 днів тому

    Vivaldi ❤

  • @Thunderbird68-i2f
    @Thunderbird68-i2f 9 місяців тому +1

    Is that rooster a Rhode Island Red?? (7:14 and 11:00)

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  9 місяців тому +1

      Yes. Rufio the Rhode Island Red - he's a sweetheart!

  • @dandeleona4760
    @dandeleona4760 8 місяців тому

    Why do people think they have to heat an entire henhouse to keep their hens warm? HALVE that coop behind a shower curtain or cardboard wall in front of the ROOST where they sleep so they can use their own body heat to heat that smaller space. When they chill, they can duck behind it for a warm up and then come out again to the run. In fact, there should be 'warm up stations' all through the run in winter, where chickens can keep warm apart for DOMINANT hens in their own 'doghouse' warm up station. Nobody has to heat anything. Just give them more cubbies, just like they'd find in the wild.

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  8 місяців тому +4

      Thanks for sharing. Your approach is one of many techniques to help chickens in the winter. Glad to hear it's working for you.
      But I'm not sure if you actually watched the video - Sweeter Heaters don't actually heat the entire henhouse, unless the coop is very small (and even then, not to a high level of heat). They just heat the space underneath them. This is why they work great over roosting bars.
      Regardless, this video is also about giving chickens a GREAT quality of life during winter (thriving), not just getting them through the cold (surviving), and heating the coop definitely helps with that - yes, even heating the whole coop (or rather, ESPECIALLY heating the whole coop!). I just moved my chickens into a new coop that is fully heated (and also air-conditioned in the summer), and my chickens have never had it better and never been so active during the winter. They are truly thriving! They forage, forage, forage in their large, protected run, come into the the coop to warm up, then forage, forage, forage... I've yet to see one even look cold. You'd think it was spring - it's wonderful!
      I disagree with you on your assertion that wild chickens stay warm in the cold winters by finding cubbies. That flies in the face of all the research on wild chickens I've seen (and I'm pretty well-versed in this). Wild chickens don't actually survive cold winters at all. This is why you only find feral flocks in areas with milder temperatures, such as Hawaii, parts of Florida, Georgia, etc., but not in places with biting cold or snow that sticks. You'd never find a wild chicken in Idaho, where I'm at, for example, during the winter - they'd be dead within a few days, if not the very first night. So if mimicking nature is one of your goals, then you'll definitely want to heat your coop - that's what chickens get in the wild, warm winters. Nature knows best!

  • @solovable1ify
    @solovable1ify 8 місяців тому +1

    Trim the combs and waddles, and then frostbite doesn't become an issue.

    • @thefeatherbrain
      @thefeatherbrain  8 місяців тому +5

      Trimming the comb and wattles is INCREDIBLY painful for chickens - the science is clear on this! This isn't an acceptable way to prevent frostbite.

  • @aaronwilliamson4045
    @aaronwilliamson4045 Рік тому +4

    Looks stupid to me.