cat of curiosity
Well-Known Member
i use a 100w bulb, works for up to 20 as long as it doesn't drop below 10f.I'm up in Maine, We raise between 25-50 chickens. When building your coop, I would recommend facing it south and using the clear panels for roof to get some solar gain and early morning light in the winter. I also vent the bottom with hardware cloth just below their roost to get rid of codensation. Make sure you don't get drafts with wind but you want ventilation. For winter, I would get a battery operated lantern but no heater. Put it in the coop at the end of the day and this will give you a few more hours of light then recharge it in the morning....=more eggs during winter.
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coops should be simple and cheap, as chickens are chickens. they'll roam if you let them, but if you have enough area, you're golden for winter. one thing i suggest above all is to have an upper compartment and access ramp that is closed off (doors are fine, this is for wind block in winter). this compartment will be the 'house' that holds heat from the 100w incandescent light bulb, and can double as a laying house.
one other suggestion is build in some horizontal bars, slats, or 2x4's from one to four feet off the ground level. cocks and hens prefer to perch.