When I was a boy our chicken coop was built into the side of a hill. We had a lot of chickens and in the winter their coop was warm from all the chickens body heat. It was my chore to collect eggs even on cold winter days in Colo.
The best way to provide circulation is to have a small vent at the top of each gable end wall. The air gets changed but the wind doesn’t hit them directly.
Hi chicken people! For water, husband shovels snow path to water. Water in in shallow bucket, sitting on a 2 ft stump with log steps to keep it out of the scratching zone and flying dirt and stays clean. For 30 years we have used an aquarium heater on a timer in winter to keep the water from freezing. It comes on at 4 afternoon to 10 morning. We live at 6200 ft in the Rockies. We don't heat our coop but do all the things this young man suggests. Haven't lost a bird yet to cold. We have had chickens live for 15 years. Not all, but some. Yeah. 15 years!🎉
I follow in my Granny's footsteps, she never heated her coop. She couldn't if she wanted to. She didn't have electricity. They roosted in the coop and were "free range" during the day, she only fed them cracked corn once a day. The chickens provided eggs and meat to feed us. People these days "pamper" their chickens and it is not needed.
you should do videos im afraid to give a food source my family relies on feed from manufactiureers that have contributed to canine deaths in the first part of 2k. I like your cracked corn feed routine would love to learn more..
I insulated our chickens coop with exterior door window cut outs. It’s 1 1/2” thick spray foam with fiberglass on both sides. We don’t get really cold weather here in north Alabama though. Might have went overboard but I had extra insulation panels to do something with.
Thank you so much for this video that was so helpful. I'm in Minnesota and it Uber cold here. I just wanted to say I want to start raising chickens and this relieved my fear for doing it in the winter.
our rooster got frostbite on his comb and waddles. so we put a heat lamp in the coop. -27 wind chill is too cold. we wrapped their run with plastic in late fall. I don't want another issue, and we love our chickens sooo much. I'm not judging your decisions though. Best of luck everyone.
When I lived in Michigan, I had a chicken coop like in the video. The chicken door opened in to the forage tent. I used heaters that are made for under desk application. Worken great. I had heated waters in the forage tent. I now live in southern Ohio, no chickens. Now its ducks and geese!
Have thought of having chickens for years now. So this kind of information is really helpful especially since I live in Wisconsin. Next week to get -7 for low. I always thought you needed to have electricity to the coop for heat and that has been one thing that's held me back. The other is end of life for the birds and dealing with that. Thanks for taking the time to share. Best wishes, Deb
I think you need to just jump right in! My chickens have brought me so much joy!! Talk to some farmers around you and pick their brain on their chicken care in your climate.
The end of life is a problem for me too. They will live to whatever age for me (I could NEVER eat them), but then what to do??? How many chickens can I bury here??
If it's any consolation, I watched every second of this video. We are just one state south of you, and our first chicks are showing up the first week of April. Thank you, I've learned a lot from your channel.
I was watching this because of my baby chicks they seem to tolerate the cold much better than the brooder temperatures that are recommended which I don't even have. I've had them outside since I got them and did start with a heat lamp and now I started putting it on a timer. Fortunately my two Broody Mama's adopted the little guys but I had some bigger ones with wings I didn't think she would adopt but they are all huddling together for warmth. Cardboard box is kind of primitive but it's only 55 degrees at night so it offers extra insulation inside a an outdoor Coupe
We built a solid coop with insulated walls with the run attached with a polycarbonate roof with the same for half walls to protect from wind and snow and to slow sun in the run. I will recommend the water container that warms their water.
I live on the Canadian Prairie where wind chill can get as low as -50C. never really used a heat lamp maybe once or twice when i first got chickens. My coop however is insulated and a open vent cupola to help with ventilation. Haven't lost one to cold weather.
@@AmysAttitude Absolutely wrong.. corn doesn't heat the body up. That's a myth. Corn gives them the extra calories they need to help them maintain body heat but doesn't cause any additional heat to be produced. Research before giving advice.
Lol, love your "special effects"! I 100% agree with many of your points. We live in Canada and don't heat our coops for the same reasons. But do many of the same things with deep litter, draft-free, good ventilation, etc.
Sometimes I wish I was better at that stuff but I found that it got the point across 🙈 and that’s great it’s nice to see people letting animals be more natural
@@erinrow399 We vent through the roof (like soffit and fascia in a house). It’s at an angle that air can flow in and out, but wind gusts won’t barrel in and ruffle the feathers of the birds.
Here in Alabama I have my coop inside a barn. That gives lots of weather protection. I cover it with a tarp and will take other measures to keep wind out of the outside run. And plenty of cracked corn!
Thank you for this validation that they can manage the cold. I agree. How ever I don't agree they are smarter than they look. They are dumb birds period...they run on pure instinct. That's what amazing. Not being "smart" birds helped me get over wanting to see them as pets. That makes culling the flock if one gets sick easier. I take good care of my hens and they give me a great source of food that i share freely with my community. End of story. P.S. I also don't name them indivually. I name the groups I get them in. My first flock of 16 were "the hamlets" the second group of 15 were "the baconettes" the third group of 10 are the velociraptors (because they were very rowdy as chicks). You get the point. 😀
I’ve had chickens for years and you are correct. But ain’t nobody does chicken like a chicken. I mean, if I had to squirt out a hard shelled watermelon daily, I’d have issues too.
We just got our first flock at our new house. We live in New England so winter is a regular occurrence 😂. Im building a coop now to house them we have 27 total. This information is helping me design and build the coop in a way that suits them best. Thx brother
In the past, I have safely used heat lamps because I dont want to find sick or dead chickens due to extreme cold weather. It happened to my son last season. Not cleaning out your coop and replacing it with fresh abundant bedding will cause coccidiosis, parasites and pneumonia. Giving high protein is a good idea. Putting a heated probe in the water to keep it from freezing up, is also essential.
Also I have heard that adding some herbs like oregano, thyme & cayenne pepper to their feed (or even water, I just heard) will help with their respiratory issues. We have meat rabbits and I give the oregano and thyme. They love it. And so far our chickens do too.
Be careful with heated water buckets. Last year we melted 2 of them when the water leaked/ran out. We have the blue ones with red lids. The first time it happened, the spring that held out the nipple got stuck and drained out all the water because of a poor design. I took apart each nipple and spread the spring on one side to make it a bigger diameter and that fixed the problem. The next time was just us not checking the water soon enough.
Suggestion- install a clear plastic roof to allow sunlight. Bird flu is caused by not enough sunlight. Also yokes are orange if you feed them greens,. Most grocers will \give you expired greens and veggies if you agree to pick them up 2 times a week !! Keep up the good work !!
@@jacobbrizammito7187 We are experienced farmers and learned this. THe sad part is, even large corporations do not have common sense. We need direct sunlight daily and so do birds. All bird houses must be built with clear plastic roofs !! The birds also need to be in the sun daily ! Thanks
@@angelofamillionyears4599 thank you for sharing this information. We are getting ready to build a "proper" coop the coming month & we were going to put on a regular tin roof. Because we have it. But I think I would rather get the clear roofing to help with this.
@@georgeingridirwin6180 Yes, you will have healthy birds. Also let them out several hours a day when sun is out. Even the big growers have no common sense. !! Good luck !
Thank you for your video. We live in Northern Illinois and the winters can be hard. Finishing building our coop and I was considering insulating it but I am now thinking I shouldn't. We insulated the floor already but maybe not walls. I am nervous because I don't want to mess it up for my girls.
We live in Boise which is pretty warm but we have some cold temperatures in winter but not as cold as Michigan. Thanks for the tips. We just started this spring. 3 layer hens and 4 pullets
NC here, colder winter than usual. We use 8 hour hot hands in socks. Helps get them through the night. We use it for biddies, puppies and dogs too, even indoors. Who doesn't like warmth.
that is also a great IDEA.. you can get hand, foot warmers for cheap, and they last almost 10 HOURS!! crazy great Idea.. I have used them (hand warmers) to remove Ice damming on my roof. 🤣😅😄
Oh WOW great idea. Thanks!! We live in the NC mountains right by DuPont. This is our first year with chickens. Do you put the warmers under the water bowl? How do you keep the chickens from pecking at them & breaking them open?? Or are they just in the coop to put off heat??
Good points in this video. We do use heat lamps...but we have a different operation...small, small commercial operation...even though we use heat lamps, I really find alot of good observations & tips in this video. Nice coop!
I mostly agree with what you are saying. We live in Oklahoma and don’t get the extreme temps like you guys. We do get some low temps though. Our full coop is probably 22.5’ x 7.5’ but we only use 7.5’x7.5’ for living space for our 6 hens. The ceiling is about 9’ high. So there’s no way we could fully heat the coop. We do use 1 or 2 heat lamps from time to time when temps get down in low 20’s, teens, and single digits but they only heat their area of the coop to about 10 degrees higher than outside temps. It does give them a way to warm up a bit after being outside. In addition, 2 of my girls are going through molting right now, so definitely trying to make sure they are warm. My husband having been in the construction industry for years sure helps as he knows how to set up the heat lamps for the least amount of risk possible.
The number one thing to pay attention to: If you can smell ammonia in your coop the chickens can smell it x10. On the warmer days get rid of any damp straw or bedding and replace it with shavings.
I use dry stall pellets for horse stalls with my straw. Cuts down the humidity and ammonia. I also shovel out high poop areas (under the roost) regularly.
Thats really bad advice straw is much much better than shavings. Shaving are horrible for chickens they produce mold much faster and will not hold air and heat like straw.
@@TankedFarms5151It's a different opinion, not "bad advice." I use shavings and I've never seen a lick of mold within my coop. Might I suggest you actually cleaning yours routinely?
NC... We found that having nest boxes 12" off the floor and roosting bars just higher than the tops of their openings (26" off floor) works best for us also, feed and water is at the height of the average birds back. Very good ventilation needed along the top walls of the coop.
Hay is good to put on the ground unlike straw hay has seeds in it and straw dose not so they can scratch around and get those seeds just my 2 cents God bless
I keep pine shavings deep but I have a poop tray u see the roosts and it’s cleaned daily. I use sawdust in the poop trays and scoop like kitty litter daily. No poop in the coop but plenty of savings on door for insulation that is nice and dry.
we have -30 weather and we put snow around the base and we cover tr outside of the coop with plastic, pit lots of straw and food and if its too cold like -30 for a few days then the heat la.p goes on
Thank you so much for this video. I super appreciate it. We live in eastern North Carolina and are just starting our first coop. I’m really hopeful things will go well we purchased buff, Orphington chicks. I hope it will be a good fit for our climate. We get very hot and humid and very cold and wet.
Opps....Our heat light, was the 40 or 60 watt. to most people "heat light", means that 200 watt red light., which just seems dangerous on many levels. the light was about 3 feet off the floor level. I would not think about using that light, on adult chickens.
My uncle has solar powered fans that draw the smell and circulate the air in his chicken coop and part of his roof is also greenhouse panels so light comes through to help keep it warm in there
We moldy floor and respiratory problems after a few seasons of deep litter plus spilled leaky waterers and poor air exchange. So it can be done well or not well.
I gotta ask, why didn't you pop the Tarped Run/Shelter in front of the Chicken Door for the Winter? Totally agree no heat lamps. Cupola can help with Air Circulation too. Deep Litter is Brilliant! Great Videos BTW Loved the Fun Run you built onto the Coop.
Does anybody have any advice they would like to share on building a chicken coop that keeps the chickens nice and warm in the winter time and what to do for them during the summer time when it's especially blistering hot and humid in Alabama and how you take care of your chickens and breed them year round? I'm just interested in learning more about this.
Going into my first chicken winter. Really nervous about it. Have a panel heater that I thought I’d use on really cold days but am now rethinking that.
Well I have raised bearded Polish and Silkes in northern Canada for 11 years , the oldest chicken will be 11 next month, I have a very well insulated 4 by 8 by 7feet high coop and an attached covered and penned outdoor area, I have heated the coop with a 24" long 120 volt thermostatically controlled baseboard heater ,it's set at about 60F or 15c it works just fine.
Keeping in mind that chickens are jungle fowl and wouldn't be in the cold naturally...They are fine as long as temperature is stable once it drops so they become acclimated, especially above zero degrees. I'm in Montana and our fickle weather fluctuates by 60 degrees or more in 24 hours so I use panel heaters on the wall when the temperature drops to below zero for a week, using the hen's behavior as indicators of their comfort. They can stand by the panel to warm up. Older hens will generally gravitate to it as younger hens are more active and stay warmer. I try to keep the temperature somewhat stable by using thermometers in the coop and checking the weather for 10 days out, if there is a big drop in temperature for a week or so to below zero, I'll use the panels. Otherwise, after a week or so of 30 below, they will stand on one foot and cry. It's very sad. Then I'll check the forecast and warm them up if the temperature will warm up to about 20 degrees over the next few days. They like to be outside during the day as long as there's not a cold wind. If there's snow on the ground, I'll pack it down in an area and scatter straw on the ground so they can free range.
I got rid of my Sweet heater infra red for that reason. They even told me they hated it. They wouldn't roost on their favorite roosting spot. As soon as they got out from under it.....shock to their systems and cold for them. I immediately removed it and returned it.
My chickens sleep up in trees all year long and they are all fine. It gets down as low as 7 Fahrenheit sometimes in the winter. They’re birds they live outside and it’s ok. I never used any heat source.
@@AcresOfAdventure I need to find someone to do that. I know it can be made here by myself or husband. But it would be nice to have one done lol. It would save a lot of arguments
@@AcresOfAdventure I was going to ask about a "Coop build" video. But I guess not. Oh well. I really like your coop. If you don't mind... What are it's dimensions??
I'm stuck in the city so I'm stuck with smaller minimalist coop/run options. When I move, I hop on custom building a nice concrete shell of a coop like they got in professional dog kennels. Predator proof, easy to clean, can install drainage and collection for manure, insulation, and you can even add passive floor heating. With ventilation and electrical hook ups, the chickens should be fine. Plus as a big shell, you can build a coop within the coop to prevent overheating.
Is this an insulated coop? I'm looking at chicken coops atm, but most of the coops I see are not insulated. We absolutely get temps of -30F and 80-90F in the summer here in Norway. Thanks for a great video!
IF, key word is IF. If you do a heat lamp or a heat source. just make sure it's on a GFI outlet. this is the safest way to do it!!!! the GFI will pop faster than a standard breaker will. just saying. I have in the winter a thermo auto stat the turns on a 40 watt light bulb (incandescent) under the water to keep the water from freezing. it turns on at 32 degs and shuts off at 40 degs. way cheaper than a 100 watt water heater. been using this method for 15 years, even at an average of 3 degs for days....
@@stick9648 😊 I think he means under the water container. My husband & I have been discussing this idea & wondering if it could be done. I guess it can.
If I have a heated water source close outside my chic coop should I put a smaller one inside my coop on the coldest days? Or would cold breeds be ok until they come out the next morning?
Hi Im new to your channel, did you build your coop or buy it? I really like it and would like one like yours. I do have a heat lamp in my coop because I only have 2 chickens and we used reclaimed wood to build it last year because we couldnt afford what we needed at the time so its very drafty.. As for my chickens I dont understand them , everyone says they're smart but my 2 would stay outside until they freeze to death if I didnt put them in their house, they also wont go in out of the rain so I put up a tarped area for them to go under outside so they dont get rained on and they still stay in the rain... I dont understand why they won't go in out of the cold or the rain ????
Robyn- You need a good, caring rooster. They are the ones who lead the rest inside. When I had a protective rooster, he made all the girls go in immediately at the sight of nightfall, potential predators, inclement weather etc. Now we have a rooster that is selfish and just cares about eating food all day. He does not make the girls go in the coop, so they are out there in the pouring rain, storms, sometimes at night etc. It sounds to me like your hen duo needs some protective leadership :)
15 is our typical lowest here in Ga where I'm located. Sometimes see 0 but most often in the 20's. But those crazy birds make me hurt watching them get out running around in the snow when we get some. Man their body's pumping blood to their feet till they look like they could explode and bleed to death at any moment. All the while they're running around digging and scratching, bock bock bock like everyday's Sunday. lol Makes me hurt all over! lol
Heck no they love it. They're spreading out their wings, splashing around in the kiddie pool and headed for the shade if it gets anything over 75 degrees.
I'm about to turn 72 in a few days and I've had chickens a large part of my life. Until a few years ago I lived in the sticks with woods all around and my chickens coop and run was in the edge of the woods for shade because it gets so hot in the deep south. I had my dairy goats barn next door to the coop and the milking parlor next door to that. I did lose a chicken to a possum and a juvenile to a hawk. We ran a couple strands of electric fence wire around the whole place and down into the woods where the goats went to forage. When the light wasn't blinking on the fence box we knew what was killing the charge. Each time that happened we would find a possum dead still biting the electric wire. When it shocked them they would react by biting the wire until it killed them. I lost count on the dead possums a long time ago. I had been leaving my coop door open here where I live now so the girls could come out when they wanted to. I thought with all the dogs around here in town we wouldn't have a problem with possums but, not so, I lost a hen a few weeks ago to a possum. Now they are locked up at night and I let them out in the morning.
7:13 they don't seem to mind the snow after all the stuff you put down. Here in Virginia, it gets freezing. Do you heat their water? I have six chickens, three ducks, a goose and a turkey that were in a coop, inside my barn, but because they do stay in there so long right now, I let them use the other half where I keep the straw and cans of feed. I try not to think like a human with them. They can adapt and yes, if heated, they will get used to it. I have an outside wire coop for when they were first getting used to the place, but it doesn't shelter much and I would trust it to predators. It would be nice if they had more room and choices. But that's a human point of view again.
When I was a boy our chicken coop was built into the side of a hill. We had a lot of chickens and in the winter their coop was warm from all the chickens body heat. It was my chore to collect eggs even on cold winter days in Colo.
The best way to provide circulation is to have a small vent at the top of each gable end wall. The air gets changed but the wind doesn’t hit them directly.
Nice suggestions, thanks.
Don't remember my grandparents coop being heated but I do remember the outhouse wasn't.
I hated having to use that thing in the winter. Held it as long as I could.
Hi chicken people! For water, husband shovels snow path to water. Water in in shallow bucket, sitting on a 2 ft stump with log steps to keep it out of the scratching zone and flying dirt and stays clean. For 30 years we have used an aquarium heater on a timer in winter to keep the water from freezing. It comes on at 4 afternoon to 10 morning. We live at 6200 ft in the Rockies. We don't heat our coop but do all the things this young man suggests. Haven't lost a bird yet to cold. We have had chickens live for 15 years. Not all, but some. Yeah. 15 years!🎉
I’m impressed! 15 years is awesome 😁
Great idea with the aquarium heater. I've heard of that for small green houses in a garbage can of water.
Thanks 😊
I follow in my Granny's footsteps, she never heated her coop. She couldn't if she wanted to. She didn't have electricity. They roosted in the coop and were "free range" during the day, she only fed them cracked corn once a day. The chickens provided eggs and meat to feed us.
People these days "pamper" their chickens and it is not needed.
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it
Thanks for sharing!!
you should do videos im afraid to give a food source my family relies on feed from manufactiureers that have contributed to canine deaths in the first part of 2k. I like your cracked corn feed routine would love to learn more..
Each chicken is as warm as a 10 W bulb. So if you have 10 chickens in the coop it's like having 100 W bulb in the coop.
I insulated our chickens coop with exterior door window cut outs. It’s 1 1/2” thick spray foam with fiberglass on both sides. We don’t get really cold weather here in north Alabama though. Might have went overboard but I had extra insulation panels to do something with.
I usually leave a candle in the cup. They sit around and toast marshmallows all night until they get tired.😊
😂
😮.....I had to re-read a few times😅
Omg shut up 😂 hilarious 😂😂😂
Thank you so much for this video that was so helpful. I'm in Minnesota and it Uber cold here. I just wanted to say I want to start raising chickens and this relieved my fear for doing it in the winter.
our rooster got frostbite on his comb and waddles. so we put a heat lamp in the coop. -27 wind chill is too cold. we wrapped their run with plastic in late fall. I don't want another issue, and we love our chickens sooo much. I'm not judging your decisions though. Best of luck everyone.
Yep, my boys with the tall combs ended up with major frostbite as well and required antibiotics and topical treatments from the vet.
When I lived in Michigan, I had a chicken coop like in the video. The chicken door opened in to the forage tent. I used heaters that are made for under desk application. Worken great. I had heated waters in the forage tent. I now live in southern Ohio, no chickens. Now its ducks and geese!
Have thought of having chickens for years now. So this kind of information is really helpful especially since I live in Wisconsin. Next week to get -7 for low. I always thought you needed to have electricity to the coop for heat and that has been one thing that's held me back. The other is end of life for the birds and dealing with that. Thanks for taking the time to share. Best wishes, Deb
when watching chicken videos and saying what is NEEDED I think back to what Mamaw and Papaw , they didn't have half of what is sold now.
@pamt8430 Yep!! Pioneers had animals in cold climates and they managed without all this stuff...we can too!
I think you need to just jump right in! My chickens have brought me so much joy!! Talk to some farmers around you and pick their brain on their chicken care in your climate.
The end of life is a problem for me too. They will live to whatever age for me (I could NEVER eat them), but then what to do??? How many chickens can I bury here??
Just make chicken soup when they stop laying eggs . Makes the best broth .
If it's any consolation, I watched every second of this video. We are just one state south of you, and our first chicks are showing up the first week of April. Thank you, I've learned a lot from your channel.
That is awesome! You will love having chickens!
I was watching this because of my baby chicks they seem to tolerate the cold much better than the brooder temperatures that are recommended which I don't even have. I've had them outside since I got them and did start with a heat lamp and now I started putting it on a timer. Fortunately my two Broody Mama's adopted the little guys but I had some bigger ones with wings I didn't think she would adopt but they are all huddling together for warmth. Cardboard box is kind of primitive but it's only 55 degrees at night so it offers extra insulation inside a an outdoor Coupe
We built a solid coop with insulated walls with the run attached with a polycarbonate roof with the same for half walls to protect from wind and snow and to slow sun in the run. I will recommend the water container that warms their water.
I live on the Canadian Prairie where wind chill can get as low as -50C. never really used a heat lamp maybe once or twice when i first got chickens. My coop however is insulated and a open vent cupola to help with ventilation. Haven't lost one to cold weather.
i think they would appreciate packing snow around the outside of koop to stop the wind going under the koop this will keep them much warmer!
Another thing you can do is give them extra corn. The carbs help keep their temps up which keeps them warmer too.
Yes, carbs to keep them nice and fluffy for the winter!
Ah why didn't I think of this? Thank you!
Which also means avoiding corn in the warm temperatures as they have to work hard to process it which heats the body up
@@AmysAttitude Absolutely wrong.. corn doesn't heat the body up. That's a myth. Corn gives them the extra calories they need to help them maintain body heat but doesn't cause any additional heat to be produced. Research before giving advice.
@@AmysAttitude good point. Thanks!!
Lol, love your "special effects"! I 100% agree with many of your points. We live in Canada and don't heat our coops for the same reasons. But do many of the same things with deep litter, draft-free, good ventilation, etc.
Sometimes I wish I was better at that stuff but I found that it got the point across 🙈 and that’s great it’s nice to see people letting animals be more natural
Can someone help me understand draft free but also good ventilation? Aren’t those contradictory?
@@erinrow399 We vent through the roof (like soffit and fascia in a house). It’s at an angle that air can flow in and out, but wind gusts won’t barrel in and ruffle the feathers of the birds.
Here in Alabama I have my coop inside a barn. That gives lots of weather protection. I cover it with a tarp and will take other measures to keep wind out of the outside run. And plenty of cracked corn!
Thank you for this validation that they can manage the cold. I agree. How ever I don't agree they are smarter than they look. They are dumb birds period...they run on pure instinct. That's what amazing. Not being "smart" birds helped me get over wanting to see them as pets. That makes culling the flock if one gets sick easier. I take good care of my hens and they give me a great source of food that i share freely with my community. End of story. P.S. I also don't name them indivually. I name the groups I get them in. My first flock of 16 were "the hamlets" the second group of 15 were "the baconettes" the third group of 10 are the velociraptors (because they were very rowdy as chicks). You get the point. 😀
Glad you enjoyed that video
I’ve had chickens for years and you are correct. But ain’t nobody does chicken like a chicken. I mean, if I had to squirt out a hard shelled watermelon daily, I’d have issues too.
Your government feels the same way about you 😂
I disagree. Chickens are smarter than they look.... At least my chickens are pretty smart. They even love piano music.
I can call each of my hens to me by name , they have better recall than most dogs . For the size of their brain it’s pretty impressive
We just got our first flock at our new house. We live in New England so winter is a regular occurrence 😂. Im building a coop now to house them we have 27 total. This information is helping me design and build the coop in a way that suits them best. Thx brother
In the past, I have safely used heat lamps because I dont want to find sick or dead chickens due to extreme cold weather. It happened to my son last season. Not cleaning out your coop and replacing it with fresh abundant bedding will cause coccidiosis, parasites and pneumonia. Giving high protein is a good idea. Putting a heated probe in the water to keep it from freezing up, is also essential.
Also a clear plastic roof to allow sunlight reduces bird flu.
Also I have heard that adding some herbs like oregano, thyme & cayenne pepper to their feed (or even water, I just heard) will help with their respiratory issues.
We have meat rabbits and I give the oregano and thyme. They love it. And so far our chickens do too.
Thanks so much for this. We're in Alaska and this coming winter will be the first for us having our chooks. Your info is very helpful. Many blessings.
Be careful with heated water buckets. Last year we melted 2 of them when the water leaked/ran out. We have the blue ones with red lids. The first time it happened, the spring that held out the nipple got stuck and drained out all the water because of a poor design. I took apart each nipple and spread the spring on one side to make it a bigger diameter and that fixed the problem. The next time was just us not checking the water soon enough.
Suggestion- install a clear plastic roof to allow sunlight. Bird flu is caused by not enough sunlight. Also yokes are orange if you feed them greens,.
Most grocers will \give you expired greens and veggies if you agree to pick them up 2 times a week !! Keep up the good work !!
Where can I find more info on sunlight relation and bird flu?.
Bird flu is a virus spread from other birds.
@@jacobbrizammito7187 We are experienced farmers and learned this. THe sad part is, even large corporations do not have common sense. We need direct sunlight daily and so do birds. All bird houses must be built with clear plastic roofs !! The birds also need to be in the sun daily ! Thanks
@@angelofamillionyears4599 thank you for sharing this information.
We are getting ready to build a "proper" coop the coming month & we were going to put on a regular tin roof. Because we have it. But I think I would rather get the clear roofing to help with this.
@@georgeingridirwin6180 Yes, you will have healthy birds. Also let them out several hours a day when sun is out. Even the big growers have no common sense. !! Good luck !
Thank you for your video. We live in Northern Illinois and the winters can be hard. Finishing building our coop and I was considering insulating it but I am now thinking I shouldn't. We insulated the floor already but maybe not walls. I am nervous because I don't want to mess it up for my girls.
We live in Boise which is pretty warm but we have some cold temperatures in winter but not as cold as Michigan. Thanks for the tips. We just started this spring. 3 layer hens and 4 pullets
NC here, colder winter than usual. We use 8 hour hot hands in socks. Helps get them through the night.
We use it for biddies, puppies and dogs too, even indoors. Who doesn't like warmth.
that is also a great IDEA.. you can get hand, foot warmers for cheap, and they last almost 10 HOURS!! crazy great Idea.. I have used them (hand warmers) to remove Ice damming on my roof. 🤣😅😄
Oh WOW great idea. Thanks!! We live in the NC mountains right by DuPont. This is our first year with chickens.
Do you put the warmers under the water bowl?
How do you keep the chickens from pecking at them & breaking them open?? Or are they just in the coop to put off heat??
Good points in this video. We do use heat lamps...but we have a different operation...small, small commercial operation...even though we use heat lamps, I really find alot of good observations & tips in this video. Nice coop!
We are getting our first backyard chickens next month......thank you for these tips!
We live in wisconsin And we do the same thing. No heater. Just a water warmer.
I mostly agree with what you are saying. We live in Oklahoma and don’t get the extreme temps like you guys. We do get some low temps though. Our full coop is probably 22.5’ x 7.5’ but we only use 7.5’x7.5’ for living space for our 6 hens. The ceiling is about 9’ high. So there’s no way we could fully heat the coop. We do use 1 or 2 heat lamps from time to time when temps get down in low 20’s, teens, and single digits but they only heat their area of the coop to about 10 degrees higher than outside temps. It does give them a way to warm up a bit after being outside. In addition, 2 of my girls are going through molting right now, so definitely trying to make sure they are warm. My husband having been in the construction industry for years sure helps as he knows how to set up the heat lamps for the least amount of risk possible.
Thanks for the tips Mary, and thank you for watching, you made some great points!
The number one thing to pay attention to: If you can smell ammonia in your coop the chickens can smell it x10. On the warmer days get rid of any damp straw or bedding and replace it with shavings.
Great point, thank you!
I use dry stall pellets for horse stalls with my straw. Cuts down the humidity and ammonia. I also shovel out high poop areas (under the roost) regularly.
Thats really bad advice straw is much much better than shavings. Shaving are horrible for chickens they produce mold much faster and will not hold air and heat like straw.
@@TankedFarms5151It's a different opinion, not "bad advice." I use shavings and I've never seen a lick of mold within my coop. Might I suggest you actually cleaning yours routinely?
Thank you so much for the advice!! God bless!!
NC... We found that having nest boxes 12" off the floor and roosting bars just higher than the tops of their openings (26" off floor) works best for us also, feed and water is at the height of the average birds back. Very good ventilation needed along the top walls of the coop.
Thanks for the info!
Also in NC, first year with chickens. Thanks for the tip.
Hay is good to put on the ground unlike straw hay has seeds in it and straw dose not so they can scratch around and get those seeds just my 2 cents God bless
I keep pine shavings deep but I have a poop tray u see the roosts and it’s cleaned daily. I use sawdust in the poop trays and scoop like kitty litter daily. No poop in the coop but plenty of savings on door for insulation that is nice and dry.
You had me at the special effects. You pulled it off. I will be a new subscriber. Keep up the good work
we have -30 weather and we put snow around the base and we cover tr outside of the coop with plastic, pit lots of straw and food and if its too cold like -30 for a few days then the heat la.p goes on
Great reminders for deep litter uses. Yesss. I feel great knowing this
Thank you so much for this video. I super appreciate it. We live in eastern North Carolina and are just starting our first coop. I’m really hopeful things will go well we purchased buff, Orphington chicks. I hope it will be a good fit for our climate. We get very hot and humid and very cold and wet.
One thing I learned about this breed is never to clip their wings they don't seem to catch much air and struggle
Thank you, from a chicken lover family 🥰 from WV!🥳😄
You are so welcome! Glad you enjoyed and hope you have a happy new year!
Another great video with lots of great advise, this spring we're getting some chicks.
You will do great and you will love them! Thanks for watching
Love your videos! Have watched every one at least a twice! Thanks so much for another great one!
Glad you like them Angie! We are happy to have you along for our journey!
In upstate, we only put a heat light in the coop, when the temp was below 0 Fahrenheit. The coop had a concrete floor.
I can see why is some drastic weather why it might benefit some flocks. That would be a good idea
Opps....Our heat light, was the 40 or 60 watt. to most people "heat light", means that 200 watt red light., which just seems dangerous on many levels. the light was about 3 feet off the floor level. I would not think about using that light, on adult chickens.
I appreciate your video, as a chicken mom I agree with you 100% you covered everything nicely done😃
Thanks so much! 😊 glad you enjoyed!
I do like your videos. It is clear that you like and explore live with animals in your farm. Many good observation and suggestion as well. Thank you .
Thank you, this was a very nice comment to read
Thanks. New chicken tender here. First winter. Very helpful. 😊
My uncle has solar powered fans that draw the smell and circulate the air in his chicken coop and part of his roof is also greenhouse panels so light comes through to help keep it warm in there
That is a great idea, thank you for that information!
We moldy floor and respiratory problems after a few seasons of deep litter plus spilled leaky waterers and poor air exchange. So it can be done well or not well.
Those fire effects were the best lol 😂 Good Vid thank you 🙏
I only use regular light bulbs. No heat just light and shredded paper fir nests.
That sounds like a good idea!
I gotta ask, why didn't you pop the Tarped Run/Shelter in front of the Chicken Door for the Winter? Totally agree no heat lamps. Cupola can help with Air Circulation too. Deep Litter is Brilliant! Great Videos BTW Loved the Fun Run you built onto the Coop.
Thank you so much!
The compost is a great idea! Thanks for sharing
Glad that it helped you!
I also heal in my coops and their yard with straw bales. Works great.
Thanks for that tip!
Don't make the same mistake I did and use fome boards for installation. Chickens will eat it.
Put a hay path leading to the hoop structure and see if they make the winter trek then. I saw chickens do that on a diff channel.
i was worried about keeping them warm this winter. Thank you.
Thank you for sharing your ideas.. It helps a lot..
Does anybody have any advice they would like to share on building a chicken coop that keeps the chickens nice and warm in the winter time and what to do for them during the summer time when it's especially blistering hot and humid in Alabama and how you take care of your chickens and breed them year round?
I'm just interested in learning more about this.
I really love your video! So informative and explained to nicely. we need more of those special effects ! haha
Where did you find your nesting box unit ?
Going into my first chicken winter. Really nervous about it. Have a panel heater that I thought I’d use on really cold days but am now rethinking that.
Im in the same boat! Nervous about this winter!
Well I have raised bearded Polish and Silkes in northern Canada for 11 years , the oldest chicken will be 11 next month, I have a very well insulated 4 by 8 by 7feet high coop and an attached covered and penned outdoor area, I have heated the coop with a 24" long 120 volt thermostatically controlled baseboard heater ,it's set at about 60F or 15c it works just fine.
Keeping in mind that chickens are jungle fowl and wouldn't be in the cold naturally...They are fine as long as temperature is stable once it drops so they become acclimated, especially above zero degrees. I'm in Montana and our fickle weather fluctuates by 60 degrees or more in 24 hours so I use panel heaters on the wall when the temperature drops to below zero for a week, using the hen's behavior as indicators of their comfort. They can stand by the panel to warm up. Older hens will generally gravitate to it as younger hens are more active and stay warmer. I try to keep the temperature somewhat stable by using thermometers in the coop and checking the weather for 10 days out, if there is a big drop in temperature for a week or so to below zero, I'll use the panels. Otherwise, after a week or so of 30 below, they will stand on one foot and cry. It's very sad. Then I'll check the forecast and warm them up if the temperature will warm up to about 20 degrees over the next few days. They like to be outside during the day as long as there's not a cold wind. If there's snow on the ground, I'll pack it down in an area and scatter straw on the ground so they can free range.
very good video!!! nice to meet you!
Thanks for coming!
I got rid of my Sweet heater infra red for that reason. They even told me they hated it. They wouldn't roost on their favorite roosting spot. As soon as they got out from under it.....shock to their systems and cold for them. I immediately removed it and returned it.
Great to hear Pamela!
Well, i put 10cm of mineral warmth material in all walls, ceiling and floor. Need to make ventilation.
Great tips; thank you so much!!
Great video. I watched the one where you put the chicken hoop attached to the coop
My chickens sleep up in trees all year long and they are all fine. It gets down as low as 7 Fahrenheit sometimes in the winter. They’re birds they live outside and it’s ok. I never used any heat source.
Where do you live & how do you collect the eggs??
Do you still use nesting boxes??
Thanks for the details... great job
No problem 👍
I like that little hut. Reminds me of what Edible Acres does. Did you make it or was it a kit?
Some one local made it and delivered it to us
@@AcresOfAdventure I need to find someone to do that. I know it can be made here by myself or husband. But it would be nice to have one done lol. It would save a lot of arguments
@@AcresOfAdventure I was going to ask about a "Coop build" video. But I guess not. Oh well. I really like your coop.
If you don't mind... What are it's dimensions??
I'm stuck in the city so I'm stuck with smaller minimalist coop/run options. When I move, I hop on custom building a nice concrete shell of a coop like they got in professional dog kennels. Predator proof, easy to clean, can install drainage and collection for manure, insulation, and you can even add passive floor heating. With ventilation and electrical hook ups, the chickens should be fine. Plus as a big shell, you can build a coop within the coop to prevent overheating.
My poultry are open all year around they can came as they like if they get to cold they will go back in their coop
Is this an insulated coop? I'm looking at chicken coops atm, but most of the coops I see are not insulated. We absolutely get temps of -30F and 80-90F in the summer here in Norway. Thanks for a great video!
Excellent tips. Thank you so much!😅
IF, key word is IF. If you do a heat lamp or a heat source. just make sure it's on a GFI outlet. this is the safest way to do it!!!! the GFI will pop faster than a standard breaker will. just saying. I have in the winter a thermo auto stat the turns on a 40 watt light bulb (incandescent) under the water to keep the water from freezing. it turns on at 32 degs and shuts off at 40 degs. way cheaper than a 100 watt water heater. been using this method for 15 years, even at an average of 3 degs for days....
Never saw an incandescent bulb in water , one cold drop on a bulb and it would shatter.
@@stick9648 😊
I think he means under the water container.
My husband & I have been discussing this idea & wondering if it could be done. I guess it can.
I love your chicken coop, can you let me know where did you get it?
Custom made locally by Amish
Another great video. What size is your coop?
Thank you! I believe it is 5x8 feet
@@AcresOfAdventure Thank you
Thank you for sharing.
Ran diesel heater and hard wired heat lamps with thermostats it's way to cold in Canada them dead bye morning
I'm hatching them. First time and it's November.
Smart guy...
If I have a heated water source close outside my chic coop should I put a smaller one inside my coop on the coldest days? Or would cold breeds be ok until they come out the next morning?
No windy drafts, good water, and good food. That's all they need. Lots of straw for insulation.
how about their eggs? do they lay eggs on winter? does the eggs freeze?
Thank you! ❤❤😊😊
Who built your coop I love the nesting baskets
We had some local to us build them!
The only thing I would say is this. The chickens with large pointy combs can have the tips freeze back.
thanks for the tips, getting chickens this spring. What about the pigs?
As long as they have a shelter and fresh straw they will do good
@@AcresOfAdventure easy enough, wasn't sure if they required more
Great tips.
Blessings.
Great advice.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it!
The heat lamp we had in ours burn our whole house down, but the chickens lived somehow
Hi Im new to your channel, did you build your coop or buy it? I really like it and would like one like yours. I do have a heat lamp in my coop because I only have 2 chickens and we used reclaimed wood to build it last year because we couldnt afford what we needed at the time so its very drafty..
As for my chickens I dont understand them , everyone says they're smart but my 2 would stay outside until they freeze to death if I didnt put them in their house, they also wont go in out of the rain so I put up a tarped area for them to go under outside so they dont get rained on and they still stay in the rain... I dont understand why they won't go in out of the cold or the rain ????
My chickens love the rain! And we had some local build the coop for us, thank you!
Robyn- You need a good, caring rooster. They are the ones who lead the rest inside. When I had a protective rooster, he made all the girls go in immediately at the sight of nightfall, potential predators, inclement weather etc. Now we have a rooster that is selfish and just cares about eating food all day. He does not make the girls go in the coop, so they are out there in the pouring rain, storms, sometimes at night etc. It sounds to me like your hen duo needs some protective leadership :)
Appreciated the vid for sure :)
Glad it helped!
Can you put bails of straw around the house can that help to keep them warmer?
15 is our typical lowest here in Ga where I'm located. Sometimes see 0 but most often in the 20's. But those crazy birds make me hurt watching them get out running around in the snow when we get some. Man their body's pumping blood to their feet till they look like they could explode and bleed to death at any moment. All the while they're running around digging and scratching, bock bock bock like everyday's Sunday. lol Makes me hurt all over! lol
Yes I think the same thing seeing them on snow!
Birds from sparrow, robbins to pheasants live in the elements , gonna get them some heaters ?
Heck no they love it. They're spreading out their wings, splashing around in the kiddie pool and headed for the shade if it gets anything over 75 degrees.
I'm about to turn 72 in a few days and I've had chickens a large part of my life. Until a few years ago I lived in the sticks with woods all around and my chickens coop and run was in the edge of the woods for shade because it gets so hot in the deep south. I had my dairy goats barn next door to the coop and the milking parlor next door to that. I did lose a chicken to a possum and a juvenile to a hawk. We ran a couple strands of electric fence wire around the whole place and down into the woods where the goats went to forage. When the light wasn't blinking on the fence box we knew what was killing the charge. Each time that happened we would find a possum dead still biting the electric wire. When it shocked them they would react by biting the wire until it killed them. I lost count on the dead possums a long time ago. I had been leaving my coop door open here where I live now so the girls could come out when they wanted to. I thought with all the dogs around here in town we wouldn't have a problem with possums but, not so, I lost a hen a few weeks ago to a possum. Now they are locked up at night and I let them out in the morning.
Thank you for sharing this, I enjoyed reading it all!
I have chickens in New Hampshire and don't heat the coop. If they're not used it, they won't miss it and they'll be fine!
7:13 they don't seem to mind the snow after all the stuff you put down.
Here in Virginia, it gets freezing. Do you heat their water?
I have six chickens, three ducks, a goose and a turkey that were in a coop, inside my barn, but because they do stay in there so long right now, I let them use the other half where I keep the straw and cans of feed.
I try not to think like a human with them. They can adapt and yes, if heated, they will get used to it.
I have an outside wire coop for when they were first getting used to the place, but it doesn't shelter much and I would trust it to predators.
It would be nice if they had more room and choices. But that's a human point of view again.
Thank you! Very informative!
Are you located in Michigan? I’ve been looking at buying a coop that looks exactly like yours. Wondering how it’s holding up ?