You have NO idea how awesome and smart you are to tell us your zone!!! Thank you! Most of these homesteaders don’t. Wasted time watching these people in zones 6 talk about keeping livestock in the “extreme cold.” lol.
Right? It’s so frustrating to watch a 20 min video about chickens or gardening and the persons ends up being in Florida or somethin. Like that isn’t gonna help me when I have enough snow to cave in a roof lol
I live on the border of Idaho and Canada. We have the same predators. We found by making “friends” with the ravens that they get territorial and help keep the eagles and hawks away. Now their cawing is a blessing instead of a curse. We also found talk radio to be helpful. (Even to some degree against the neighbor’s dog!)
You two have done an excellent job at giving your chickens a safe and comfortable home. The fact that they have a sheltered area to get out even in winter is so important in my opinion.
I live in Simcoe County, Ontario. When we first got chickens, family and friends asked how we would keep them warm in their coop during the winter. I said they will keep each other warm just fine. After all, we have lots of wild turkey in the forest behind our house, and they don’t get huddle up in a coop at night, do they? 😂 If the turkeys are doing fine, then I’m sure my chickens in a coop will do fine too. 👍🏼
-40 and quite wet here in Northern Quebec-Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean area. If we have chickens again, I would love them to be happy- as happy as yours seem to be! 💕 😊 Thank you for sharing these clear hopeful tips.
We just discovered your channel recently and really hope you keep posting. It is packed with great info, great formats and relevant to Canadian climate. Thanks!
Yes! great video, we raise Chantecler Heritage breeds, good ventilation and deep bedding, no heat lamps, lights or insulation, low maintenance is the best maintenance!!
A few years ago, I ran into a large black bear , who was attracted to a neighbors chicken feed, I banged the garbage can lid to scare him away. I would love too keep chickens someday when I can move upstate full time. I learned a lot watching this video, thanks for sharing
Great video! I am in northeastern Ontario (little over an hour from the Quebec border) and i have had so many people say i can't keep chickens alive up here without heating their coop. Wrong! Proving it right now 😊 this morning was -18c and they all came running out for breakfast when I opened em up at 7:30! Once all the "teenager" roo's had been booted outside they all followed Ragnar back inside of course 😂 Love your videos! Thanks for all the tips and encouragement 😊
People really tend to overcomplicate keeping chickens for some reason. Glad to hear you have some happy northern chickens, Kristal! Thanks for following along with us!
Wonderful to hear you can keep chickens in the North! I am interested in living in Northeast ON eventually. Do you keep your chicken coop heated and/or lighted in the winter? Just wondering if you have them free range in the winter or simply in a roofed structure like in this video.
oh my gosh! great tips! I live in Minnesota and I wasn't sure about some type of heat source here in the winters. I will incorporate your tips with my coop. thanks again!
You definitely have your challenges with the cold climate and forest creatures. Nice job with the coop. I like the talk radio solution. The soffits are a good idea also. We don't put lights on our girls either. It's nice to give them a break and we don't mind the break either. Although, we did keep one meat bird and she has continued to lay eggs as well as one of our other girls. Cheers!
Thanks 👍! Our meat birds that we kept have started laying for us. Hard to say if they'll go broody or not so we'll be investing in an incubator very soon. Cheers buddy!
We have a comparable Winter where we live in MN with a good number of predators, too. You win with those bears though! The talk radio is a hoot! Smart. Thank you for sharing your (in our zone reality) Winter coop experiences. I learned some things I will do when building ours soon.
So happy to have come across your videos! We are in Algoma as well, but on the shores of Huron, not superior :) We are working towards a more self sufficient/ sustainable lifestyle, and have wanted Chickens for a long time now, but we were worried about how they would fare during the cold winter months as well as keeping away predators. Thank you so much for sharing, this helps a lot :)
One thing to remember is you will always need more than u think to take care of chickens, i got 2 small coops, now im building my own n getting rid of those
I live in the center of the lower peninsula of Michigan and will be facing all the same exact animals you name except wolves, we pick up our laying hens Aug 18th, so this video was very helpful. Thanks much! I have vacationed near your location in years past, beautiful country.
Thank you. Very detailed, helpful, informative, useful, enjoyed your video. Thank you for your time and effort to educate others. Very ingenious chicken coop. I have 3 chickens and live in southwestern Idaho. So currently experiencing temps in the teens and twenties. Brought the chickens into my RV shop. Their in a large wardrobe box laying horizontally on the ground. I have several inches of wood chips, a perching rod, food and water. The shop is in the low 40’s inside while outside it’s now, 1 Jan 2022, 12 degrees. I let them out back in their coop run during the day when it’s sunny. They have fresh water, food and thick layer of wood chips. Any suggestions, ideas, or things I should not do, or do differently! Again thank you. I have shared your video with many others. P.S. I severed with the Canadian Army and Air Force personnel in Afghanistan. We even ran the US Marine Corps Marathon while in Afghanistan. A Great groups of carrying professional medical men and women doctors, nurses, Med techs. Thank you “O Canada” 🇨🇦👍🏻😉😎. 👍🏻✝️🇨🇦👍🏻✝️🇺🇸⛄️❄️🏒⛸⛷🎿🥌⚽️☃️❄️🌧🐓😎👍🏻🇨🇦😎👍🏻🙏🏻✝️🇺🇸🇨🇦
Hej from the north of Sweden. We keep eight hens in an unheated building attached to the house. One tupp (rooster) and seven hens. I deep litter them, a mix of hay, sand and leaf litter which is easy to gather as we're surrounded by forest. They're Brahma hens so well feathered, the cold doesn't bother them but they hate the wind like most hens. For ventilation we leave the door ajar, but I don't let them outdoors over winter. Having watched your video I might try to this winter. :) We have similar predators too...birds of prey, plus wolverines, bears (not a problem in winter) as well as pine marten, wolves and foxes.
we do very similar except under the roost i made . we have a tarp attached and it collects poop over the night so every morning i go in with a dust pan and a mini grass rake pick up the poops on the floor and scoop out the tarp into a bucket for garden compost .our coop stays so clean and we use 8o% less straw .warmer here in kootenays [ bears ] so i had to run electric fence zig zag up an down the outside walls . In front of entrance door peppered a ply wood 4x4 sheet with 1 1/2 roof nails and on hinges so it can fold up every morning to keep bear from standing and being able to push on door . Its october and bears still full blast active trying to get easy meals . The new citiot neighbors have trained the bears to to get thier stored garbage and outside deep freeze food . So now a bear problem here after not having bears for like 15 yrs . i attached cow bells to our freezer so dogs can be alerted waking us If a bear was to return to our property .
Super happy we met on the livestream tonight, really enjoyed this video. Fitting too cause one of my big projects on my farm this year is to build a new chicken coop. Right now they’re in my small barn, but need a more permanent living space. I can’t wait till spring 🔨 🪵 Love the rustic wood look of your coop, did you guys build it yourselves? I have a design in my head for my coop I just need to get it built. I’ll get caught up on some more vids soon. 😃
Thanks Hidden Spring Farm! Yes, we built the coop a couple of years ago. Mainly using reclaimed lumber from an old cabin that once stood on the property here. We have another video that goes into a little more detail on the build. You can check that out here if you like: ua-cam.com/video/HMONoWSHf0A/v-deo.html It's always nice to find other Canadian channels. And in Ontario is even better. Looking forward to catching up with your videos as well. Cheers, and welcome to the Wilderstead!
Finally a homestead channel that is the same as ours, your videos are really well done and I love the content. We have to use an electric fence around the perimeter and at night we also play CBC at night, as a bonus we made bear boards for added protection.
I got stuck in a lake effect snow storm a few years back coming down from Wawa and luckily made it into Eliot Lake JUST at dark, what a day! Crazy winter storm and one i will never forget.
First winter chicken keeper over here in 1A (about 80 KM from the NWT!) I have the ability to supplement heat for the -55C days but hoping ill be able to keep them in the insulated coop without supplemental heat the majority of the winter
I live in NS Canada and am a first time chicken owner. My mom came up with a real quick solution to keep the raccoons from opening the barrel locks. She bought these swivel snap clips and we clip it into the end of the barrel lock so you can't open it.
I really enjoyed your video. My husband and l are thinking about getting egg laying chicken. We live on Manitoulin Island and so we have many predictors and the winter are brutal. So you answered a lot of my question. Thank you. The radio was a good idea. I look forward to your videos.
Great video! We had chickens when I was a kid and I plan to get more this spring when I was a kid we ran an extension cord to the coop this time it will be a much farther distance so I've been trying to figure out if it's really necessary to keep their water your input is very helpful thank you.
Great info--thanks! I live up against the Manistee National Forest in the Newaygo, MI area, and my conditions are a bit less extreme--I have occasional coyotes, foxes, bears and predator birds, and it's not quite as cold--but I still have all of these same things to consider. I'm hoping to start keeping chickens next year and trying to learn from others' experience. Much appreciated!
Well that was an easy 'subscribe, like and comment!' What a great video. You two make a great team - clear to see. It's also very helpful to list your zone, as noted above, so few do. I'm new to homesteading, in the alpine above Kelowna, close to ski country so no stranger to extended bouts of -25 to -30 (but not like MN!). Some great tips in here - and I LOVE the look of your coop! The functionality is obvious. I'll check out your other videos but I can already see I'll learn a lot more! Nice work folks. Stay well - 'eh'?
Oh we have lost of predator wildlife in the UK, fox, badger. Other wildlife hedgehogs deer …. What do you see in Canada oh you know just the usual, fox, coyotes, wolf, cougar and Lynx…… oh and bears…. Gosh
Great information! I’m in Northern Michigan just below the Bridge so I have the cold and the same predators to deal with. I’m trying to plan my coop now and decide which birds to get as well as keeping them safe and warm! New subscriber, I believe you can teach me much, thank you!
We have had bear issues with our chicken feed before. We had 3 different bears coming around almost every night, I would chase them off each time. I have not seen one all summer, or this fall so far. I figured if they would not stop, I would hunt them myself, I always wanted a bear rug like the one my grandparents had lol. No issues so far with them trying to get to our chickens, we also have cougars, coyotes, and bob cats, but none of them have been much of an issue, I made the property a hot zone for them to enter, protected by mr 06. mr 12 and family. The deer some times will stay for weeks not leaving and I am fine with that, I have no intentions eating them.
Thank you. Very detailed, helpful, informative, useful, enjoyed your video. Thank you for your time and effort to educate others. Very ingenious chicken coop. I have 3 chickens and live in southwestern Idaho. So currently experiencing temps in the teens and twenties. Brought the chickens into my RV shop. Their in a large wardrobe box laying horizontally on the ground. I have several inches of wood chips, a perching rod, food and water. The shop is in the low 40’s inside while outside it’s now, 1 Jan 2022, 12 degrees. I let them out back in their coop run during the day when it’s sunny. They have fresh water, food and thick layer of wood chips. Any suggestions, ideas, or things I should not do, or do differently! Again thank you. I have shared your video with many others. P.S. I severed with the Canadian Army and Air Force personnel in Afghanistan. We even ran the US Marine Corps Marathon while in Afghanistan. A Great groups of carrying professional medical men and women doctors, nurses, Med techs. Thank you “O Canada” 🇨🇦👍🏻😉😎. 👍🏻✝️🇨🇦👍🏻✝️🇺🇸⛄️❄️🏒⛸⛷🎿🥌⚽️☃️❄️🌧🐓😎👍🏻🇨🇦😎👍🏻🙏🏻✝️🇺🇸🇨🇦
Sorry if you’ve answered this question a hundred times, but… how often do you change you straw out during the winter months? Thanks for the great video.
We don’t change out the straw: we continually add to it, on top of the old stuff, over the winter. It’s called the deep litter method. In late May or early June we remove all of the bedding and compost it, and then replenish with fresh straw in the coop at that time.
Do you have a video or plans on how you built this? Would very much appreciate something like that! This looks fantastic we are looking to build one this spring and this would be perfect 🥰
Your video is WELL DONE! Thank you! Questions: 1) From what I can tell, other than the deep litter on the floor, it is not insulated (and has constant heat loss through the vented soffits), correct? If so, why would you not insulate? Is it better without? 2) What breed(s) of chickens do you recommend for the cold climate? (Goes to -40 here.) Is there any concern with the large comb and wattle breeds like Orpingtons? 3) Why did you build it off the ground? Would it not be just as good set on the ground?
Thanks guys I love this video. Tell me pls. what is an usual practice for changing of stray from chicken coop & get fresh stray, I mean until how long we can keep stray in the coop
What breed is your white rooster please? My rooster looks just like this but Im not sure what breed.... thanks. Ps. Awesome informative video on raising chickens in canada. Cheers from B.C.
Dig out a 7 foot wide 7 foot deep moat around the farm coop with a 7 foot fence on the land side. Predators are not going to waste thier time falling into holes or moats filled with water and spikey fences!
Thank you!
Thank YOU! ❤️
You have NO idea how awesome and smart you are to tell us your zone!!! Thank you! Most of these homesteaders don’t. Wasted time watching these people in zones 6 talk about keeping livestock in the “extreme cold.” lol.
Right? It’s so frustrating to watch a 20 min video about chickens or gardening and the persons ends up being in Florida or somethin. Like that isn’t gonna help me when I have enough snow to cave in a roof lol
I live on the border of Idaho and Canada. We have the same predators. We found by making “friends” with the ravens that they get territorial and help keep the eagles and hawks away. Now their cawing is a blessing instead of a curse. We also found talk radio to be helpful. (Even to some degree against the neighbor’s dog!)
coast to coast radio.. haaa.. now my birds are well informed to the alien invasion.. haa ( but it works keeps the coyotes away)
You two have done an excellent job at giving your chickens a safe and comfortable home. The fact that they have a sheltered area to get out even in winter is so important in my opinion.
Hello guys from Michigan
Thanks. From Racine, Wisconsin....
I live in Simcoe County, Ontario. When we first got chickens, family and friends asked how we would keep them warm in their coop during the winter. I said they will keep each other warm just fine. After all, we have lots of wild turkey in the forest behind our house, and they don’t get huddle up in a coop at night, do they? 😂 If the turkeys are doing fine, then I’m sure my chickens in a coop will do fine too. 👍🏼
You know it!
-40 and quite wet here in Northern Quebec-Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean area. If we have chickens again, I would love them to be happy- as happy as yours seem to be! 💕 😊 Thank you for sharing these clear hopeful tips.
This is awesome! I just bought. Homestead property in Manitoba, so this is exactly what I needed.
Access to fresh water is so important,I like the heated waterer.
Thank you, from Northern Montana
We just discovered your channel recently and really hope you keep posting. It is packed with great info, great formats and relevant to Canadian climate. Thanks!
Welcome to the Wilderstead! We’ll be back to regular videos soon. In the mean time you can follow us in FB and IG for more fun!
Yes! great video, we raise Chantecler Heritage breeds, good ventilation and deep bedding, no heat lamps, lights or insulation, low maintenance is the best maintenance!!
Keep it simple, right! The birds don't need much, that's for sure. Thanks for tuning in Foxfire, Cheers!
Love that u don’t use artificial lighting. ❤️❤️❤️. Gals need a break!
Talk Radio ! love it.
Have you noticed talk radio working to deter other predators?
Yes, much better than music for any animals. People talking tends to keep them away.
A few years ago, I ran into a large black bear , who was attracted to a neighbors chicken feed, I banged the garbage can lid to scare him away. I would love too keep chickens someday when I can move upstate full time. I learned a lot watching this video, thanks for sharing
Glad to hear it was helpful! Thanks for tuning in!
Great video! I am in northeastern Ontario (little over an hour from the Quebec border) and i have had so many people say i can't keep chickens alive up here without heating their coop. Wrong! Proving it right now 😊 this morning was -18c and they all came running out for breakfast when I opened em up at 7:30! Once all the "teenager" roo's had been booted outside they all followed Ragnar back inside of course 😂
Love your videos! Thanks for all the tips and encouragement 😊
People really tend to overcomplicate keeping chickens for some reason. Glad to hear you have some happy northern chickens, Kristal! Thanks for following along with us!
Wonderful to hear you can keep chickens in the North! I am interested in living in Northeast ON eventually.
Do you keep your chicken coop heated and/or lighted in the winter? Just wondering if you have them free range in the winter or simply in a roofed structure like in this video.
Thank you guys for sharing this!
Talk radio, who knew?? kinda clever tho :)
We considered leaving an iPad out playing Wilderstead videos on repeat if the talk radio didn’t work 😂
I live in the east end of Ontario, Vankleek Hill.
We are from Hawkesbury! 😊
Awesome and thank you!
oh my gosh! great tips! I live in Minnesota and I wasn't sure about some type of heat source here in the winters. I will incorporate your tips with my coop. thanks again!
You definitely have your challenges with the cold climate and forest creatures. Nice job with the coop. I like the talk radio solution. The soffits are a good idea also. We don't put lights on our girls either. It's nice to give them a break and we don't mind the break either. Although, we did keep one meat bird and she has continued to lay eggs as well as one of our other girls. Cheers!
Thanks 👍! Our meat birds that we kept have started laying for us. Hard to say if they'll go broody or not so we'll be investing in an incubator very soon. Cheers buddy!
We have a comparable Winter where we live in MN with a good number of predators, too. You win with those bears though! The talk radio is a hoot! Smart. Thank you for sharing your (in our zone reality) Winter coop experiences. I learned some things I will do when building ours soon.
So happy to have come across your videos! We are in Algoma as well, but on the shores of Huron, not superior :) We are working towards a more self sufficient/ sustainable lifestyle, and have wanted Chickens for a long time now, but we were worried about how they would fare during the cold winter months as well as keeping away predators. Thank you so much for sharing, this helps a lot :)
Welcome to the Wilderstead, Chris!
One thing to remember is you will always need more than u think to take care of chickens, i got 2 small coops, now im building my own n getting rid of those
Yes, chicken math is a real thing 😂
Very nice informative video thank you.
A bear just ripped the door off my chicken coup and took a few of my chickens. I'll get a radio. I'm in Lake Tahoe area.
I always play some podcasts for my local raccoons.
Do they have a preference?
I live in the center of the lower peninsula of Michigan and will be facing all the same exact animals you name except wolves, we pick up our laying hens Aug 18th, so this video was very helpful. Thanks much! I have vacationed near your location in years past, beautiful country.
We are in Woodlawn Ontario 👍
As a zone 4 / edge of zone 3 Vermonter, this is perfect! Thanks neighbors!
I learned a lot from this. Very useful.
Great to hear!
Thank you. Very detailed, helpful, informative, useful, enjoyed your video. Thank you for your time and effort to educate others. Very ingenious chicken coop. I have 3 chickens and live in southwestern Idaho. So currently experiencing temps in the teens and twenties. Brought the chickens into my RV shop.
Their in a large wardrobe box laying horizontally on the ground. I have several inches of wood chips, a perching rod, food and water. The shop is in the low 40’s inside while outside it’s now, 1 Jan 2022, 12 degrees. I let them out back in their coop run during the day when it’s sunny. They have fresh water, food and thick layer of wood chips. Any suggestions, ideas, or things I should not do, or do differently! Again thank you. I have shared your video with many others.
P.S. I severed with the Canadian Army and Air Force personnel in Afghanistan. We even ran the US Marine Corps Marathon while in Afghanistan.
A Great groups of carrying professional medical men and women doctors, nurses, Med techs.
Thank you “O Canada” 🇨🇦👍🏻😉😎.
👍🏻✝️🇨🇦👍🏻✝️🇺🇸⛄️❄️🏒⛸⛷🎿🥌⚽️☃️❄️🌧🐓😎👍🏻🇨🇦😎👍🏻🙏🏻✝️🇺🇸🇨🇦
Thank you so so much !
WoW thank you for your video ❤ that help me for my chickens 😊
Awesome tips and your coop is outstanding! Such a solid, cozy place for your chicks :)
Thanks so much Cathy! Happy birds!
Great tips thanks!!!
Hej from the north of Sweden. We keep eight hens in an unheated building attached to the house. One tupp (rooster) and seven hens. I deep litter them, a mix of hay, sand and leaf litter which is easy to gather as we're surrounded by forest. They're Brahma hens so well feathered, the cold doesn't bother them but they hate the wind like most hens. For ventilation we leave the door ajar, but I don't let them outdoors over winter. Having watched your video I might try to this winter. :) We have similar predators too...birds of prey, plus wolverines, bears (not a problem in winter) as well as pine marten, wolves and foxes.
Ours just go outside in the winter if they feel like it. There's a small door they can use that leads out into their covered run.
we do very similar except under the roost i made . we have a tarp attached and it collects poop over the night so every morning i go in with a dust pan and a mini grass rake pick up the poops on the floor and scoop out the tarp into a bucket for garden compost .our coop stays so clean and we use 8o% less straw .warmer here in kootenays [ bears ] so i had to run electric fence zig zag up an down the outside walls . In front of entrance door peppered a ply wood 4x4 sheet with 1 1/2 roof nails and on hinges so it can fold up every morning to keep bear from standing and being able to push on door . Its october and bears still full blast active trying to get easy meals . The new citiot neighbors have trained the bears to to get thier stored garbage and outside deep freeze food . So now a bear problem here after not having bears for like 15 yrs . i attached cow bells to our freezer so dogs can be alerted waking us If a bear was to return to our property .
There was a time we had a 'poop shelf' type thing in the coop. Made more sense for us to do the deep litter method though
Super happy we met on the livestream tonight, really enjoyed this video. Fitting too cause one of my big projects on my farm this year is to build a new chicken coop. Right now they’re in my small barn, but need a more permanent living space. I can’t wait till spring 🔨 🪵 Love the rustic wood look of your coop, did you guys build it yourselves? I have a design in my head for my coop I just need to get it built. I’ll get caught up on some more vids soon. 😃
Thanks Hidden Spring Farm! Yes, we built the coop a couple of years ago. Mainly using reclaimed lumber from an old cabin that once stood on the property here. We have another video that goes into a little more detail on the build. You can check that out here if you like: ua-cam.com/video/HMONoWSHf0A/v-deo.html
It's always nice to find other Canadian channels. And in Ontario is even better. Looking forward to catching up with your videos as well. Cheers, and welcome to the Wilderstead!
Great video. Thanks guys....
Finally a homestead channel that is the same as ours, your videos are really well done and I love the content. We have to use an electric fence around the perimeter and at night we also play CBC at night, as a bonus we made bear boards for added protection.
Welcome to the Wilderstead, Laurie!
Where exactly do you put bear boards? And any other details. 👍thank you for your time.
@@krystalborgman we place them on the ground by any entrances or windows ,been very effective for us.
Love this channel thank you so much for sharing your experience raisingchickens in the North. A big wave from Brandon, Manitoba
Very informative and super charming video! Many thanks from Maine!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Awesome video 📹 👏 👌
as an iron ranger im a tad jealous that you guys get a nice "warm" southern wind coming over lake superior in the winter lol
Thanks y’all! I truly enjoyed this video! Turn that dial to “truth frequency radio” I bet no animal will be there only the humans eh?
Cheers!
Bears are smart. They hate talk radio. 😉
I got stuck in a lake effect snow storm a few years back coming down from Wawa and luckily made it into Eliot Lake JUST at dark, what a day! Crazy winter storm and one i will never forget.
Yeah, it does get crazy here very often. Between December and March you can expect the road to be closed at least once a week. You get used to it.
The exterior of your outbuildings look fantastic. Great job!
Thanks Tim! Cheers!
This is awesome
Thanks
Thank you very much. you all answered ALL my questions. really appreciate your video
Great!
Great tips! Just subscribed, you had me at talk radio lol.
Welcome to the Wilderstead!
The talk radio idea is great, I’ll definitely try that, thank you! Love the coop setup, I’m building something similar as we speak. Cheers!
Guys, I don't know how much the rules have changed since I left Oxford county 50 years ago, but bear is a great tasting source of protein !
Love the talk radio idea for my chickens! Glad I stayed till the end!
Lovely video. I really needed this information. You answered ALL the questions I had.
Thankyou
Glad it was helpful!
First winter chicken keeper over here in 1A (about 80 KM from the NWT!) I have the ability to supplement heat for the -55C days but hoping ill be able to keep them in the insulated coop without supplemental heat the majority of the winter
Also a new chicken owner and this was great info as I prepare for our first winter with the hens.
Glad it was helpful!
I live in NS Canada and am a first time chicken owner. My mom came up with a real quick solution to keep the raccoons from opening the barrel locks. She bought these swivel snap clips and we clip it into the end of the barrel lock so you can't open it.
great video!
Great video. Would love to be in a location like that. Chicks look super happy.well done.😎👍
Finally a podcast that matches my spot in northern Wisconsin weather and critters
Excellent video. Greeting from southern Ontario. Love Lake Superior and visit every year.
We have 3 strands of high powered electric fence all around our runs 👍
We use solar electric fence around all our coops and runs. This helps keep out the predators.
Definitely a good addition to a predator control plan.
Thanks for the good advice from zone 3 Wisconsin.
New friend here!! And a lover of chickens! I'm in Ottawa Ontario, but also garden at my cottage 2.5 hours north near Maniwaki Que which is zone 4
Welcome to the Wilderstead!
I really enjoyed your video. My husband and l are thinking about getting egg laying chicken. We live on Manitoulin Island and so we have many predictors and the winter are brutal. So you answered a lot of my question. Thank you. The radio was a good idea. I look forward to your videos.
That is awesome!
Great video! We had chickens when I was a kid and I plan to get more this spring when I was a kid we ran an extension cord to the coop this time it will be a much farther distance so I've been trying to figure out if it's really necessary to keep their water your input is very helpful thank you.
Glad it was useful for you!
Great info--thanks! I live up against the Manistee National Forest in the Newaygo, MI area, and my conditions are a bit less extreme--I have occasional coyotes, foxes, bears and predator birds, and it's not quite as cold--but I still have all of these same things to consider. I'm hoping to start keeping chickens next year and trying to learn from others' experience. Much appreciated!
Great! Glad it was useful for ya. Cheers!
Well that was an easy 'subscribe, like and comment!' What a great video. You two make a great team - clear to see. It's also very helpful to list your zone, as noted above, so few do. I'm new to homesteading, in the alpine above Kelowna, close to ski country so no stranger to extended bouts of -25 to -30 (but not like MN!). Some great tips in here - and I LOVE the look of your coop! The functionality is obvious. I'll check out your other videos but I can already see I'll learn a lot more! Nice work folks. Stay well - 'eh'?
Welcome aboard!
Thank you for answering some questions I had about raising chickens in the winter.
thank you, you are so amazing, I find very thing I need in this great video
Happy to hear that!
That explains a lot - I am in central Michigan - i just found your channel.
Welcome to the Wilderstead, Connie!
Oh we have lost of predator wildlife in the UK, fox, badger. Other wildlife hedgehogs deer …. What do you see in Canada oh you know just the usual, fox, coyotes, wolf, cougar and Lynx…… oh and bears…. Gosh
Good practical things you are doing.
If we are ever allowed to be social again, you are getting some eggs Jim! Cheers buddy!
@@Wilderstead Yummy...syrup too?
Oh yeah, you bet!
I can hear goat sound background..😂😂😂!!! That's really cool..😁😁😂😜
Hahaha they are definitely very talkative creatures! 😂 🐐
Thank you for sharing this information with me. I'm subscribed now. 😊
Great days on the Wilderstead !
Cheers Bubba!
Love the talk radio tip. Lol
Great information! I’m in Northern Michigan just below the Bridge so I have the cold and the same predators to deal with. I’m trying to plan my coop now and decide which birds to get as well as keeping them safe and warm! New subscriber, I believe you can teach me much, thank you!
Welcome to the Wilderstead!
We have some cold weather in Kentucky but not near like what you have.
I love your coop. My girls get to roam the garage and go outside a bit if they want but they prefer just staying in the garage.
Thanks Mallorie! There are definitely days that the birds decide to stay inside. Especially the windy snowy ones LOL!
I take cardboard boxes and line a little pat to lure them, they go under the house where the sandbox are, but they think about it 1st lol
Talking about politics especially would do the trick.😀
😂
OMG vacation your chickens Florida, Jan 1 it's 81
Radio eh? Nice!
Pretty neat!
We have had bear issues with our chicken feed before. We had 3 different bears coming around almost every night, I would chase them off each time. I have not seen one all summer, or this fall so far. I figured if they would not stop, I would hunt them myself, I always wanted a bear rug like the one my grandparents had lol. No issues so far with them trying to get to our chickens, we also have cougars, coyotes, and bob cats, but none of them have been much of an issue, I made the property a hot zone for them to enter, protected by mr 06. mr 12 and family. The deer some times will stay for weeks not leaving and I am fine with that, I have no intentions eating them.
Warm ginger cayanne pepper tea rotate with Chinese medicine herb Bai hua she she cao.with radix istalis..strong tea
Thank you. Very detailed, helpful, informative, useful, enjoyed your video. Thank you for your time and effort to educate others. Very ingenious chicken coop. I have 3 chickens and live in southwestern Idaho. So currently experiencing temps in the teens and twenties. Brought the chickens into my RV shop.
Their in a large wardrobe box laying horizontally on the ground. I have several inches of wood chips, a perching rod, food and water. The shop is in the low 40’s inside while outside it’s now, 1 Jan 2022, 12 degrees. I let them out back in their coop run during the day when it’s sunny. They have fresh water, food and thick layer of wood chips. Any suggestions, ideas, or things I should not do, or do differently! Again thank you. I have shared your video with many others.
P.S. I severed with the Canadian Army and Air Force personnel in Afghanistan. We even ran the US Marine Corps Marathon while in Afghanistan.
A Great groups of carrying professional medical men and women doctors, nurses, Med techs.
Thank you “O Canada” 🇨🇦👍🏻😉😎.
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Thanks!
Ive heard crows will protect chickens if you feed them lol
Crows will usually keep other aerial predators away, yes. They'll also potentially eat young chickens and steal eggs if given the chance.
Sorry if you’ve answered this question a hundred times, but… how often do you change you straw out during the winter months? Thanks for the great video.
We don’t change out the straw: we continually add to it, on top of the old stuff, over the winter. It’s called the deep litter method. In late May or early June we remove all of the bedding and compost it, and then replenish with fresh straw in the coop at that time.
@@Wilderstead thanks
I froze some of my eggs for the 1st time at then end of this summer.
Great!
Your coop is about the same size as my house
Do you have a video or plans on how you built this? Would very much appreciate something like that! This looks fantastic we are looking to build one this spring and this would be perfect 🥰
Hey Kyra, this video goes over how we built the chicken coop, to some degree: ua-cam.com/video/HMONoWSHf0A/v-deo.html
Your video is WELL DONE! Thank you! Questions: 1) From what I can tell, other than the deep litter on the floor, it is not insulated (and has constant heat loss through the vented soffits), correct? If so, why would you not insulate? Is it better without? 2) What breed(s) of chickens do you recommend for the cold climate? (Goes to -40 here.) Is there any concern with the large comb and wattle breeds like Orpingtons? 3) Why did you build it off the ground? Would it not be just as good set on the ground?
Thanks guys I love this video. Tell me pls. what is an usual practice for changing of stray from chicken coop & get fresh stray, I mean until how long we can keep stray in the coop
We change the straw twice a year. Spring and Fall.
What breed is your white rooster please? My rooster looks just like this but Im not sure what breed.... thanks. Ps. Awesome informative video on raising chickens in canada. Cheers from B.C.
Dig out a 7 foot wide 7 foot deep moat around the farm coop with a 7 foot fence on the land side. Predators are not going to waste thier time falling into holes or moats filled with water and spikey fences!
There is no digging here, we are sitting in bedrock.
@@Wilderstead oh my....
You are in one cold 🥶 humid place. I.e. fog and rain.