Ventilation Basics for Any Chicken Coop in a Cold Winter

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 41

  • @minomokwa744
    @minomokwa744 Před měsícem +2

    Valuable advice to a novice-chicky-owner ... Thank you so much. Love your content. God bless you & your animals.

  • @staceykelley
    @staceykelley Před rokem +8

    "Keep your vents high and your chickens dry." Haha. Perfect!

  • @rogerknight2267
    @rogerknight2267 Před rokem +6

    The front door on my coop is a piece of plywood that I have set up on a track that allows me to raise or lower as needed. I mostly leave it up unless the weather gets really crazy cold. In that case I lower the little door when they go to roost. It helps to keep that really cold winds out.

  • @forgedoutcomes
    @forgedoutcomes Před rokem +5

    Catching up; you're making some great videos, keep it up!

  • @brandonb6274
    @brandonb6274 Před rokem +5

    Thanks for the help. Someone once told me to keep one vent low and one high. That didn’t sound correct to me seeing how it would cause a draft across the chickens. Thanks for clarifying to keep the vents high

  • @colettejo
    @colettejo Před rokem +3

    Good info! Cute chickens!

  • @davishlamburnt3734
    @davishlamburnt3734 Před rokem +3

    Thanks a bunch for this. My roosters combs get frost bite every winter. I'm going try some roof vents on the south opposite of the cold north wind.

  • @brokendolly6967
    @brokendolly6967 Před rokem +3

    Thank you. This was very helpful.

  • @danielburton6221
    @danielburton6221 Před rokem +4

    Very interesting

  • @lindarobbins5532
    @lindarobbins5532 Před rokem +3

    Great video! You can tell that you have a lot of love for your chickens.

  • @lisagardner9798
    @lisagardner9798 Před rokem +2

    In the process of building a coop and was looking for ventilation ideas and your video came up. This was very helpful. Thank you

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem

      I'm really glad! I hope all goes well with your chickens and I'd love to hear updates! Blessings!

  • @sebastianmaldonado6921
    @sebastianmaldonado6921 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Super helpful. Thanks!

  • @nodakjohnsful
    @nodakjohnsful Před rokem +3

    Solid good basic information. Well done !

  • @Mary-had-a-lil-farm
    @Mary-had-a-lil-farm Před rokem +3

    Great information. Accurate and useful. I like the way you have your chicken area set up.

  • @jessfarehurth
    @jessfarehurth Před rokem +4

    Great! This is what I was asking for on the other video. Thank you. Do you worry about gasses from droppings filtering up to the chickens as they vent at the top?

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem

      We don't really find that to be a concern. Certainly not as big of a concern as low vents causing a drafty coop would be.

    • @martykuhn5894
      @martykuhn5894 Před rokem

      Ammonia gasses are unavoidable. A vented coop never reaches high concentrations.

  • @lulabelle4760
    @lulabelle4760 Před rokem +1

    I like your calm, factual presentation. This is off topic- is the roof over your run flat or pitched? I am needing to redo mine and like yours! Happy New Year!

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem

      Thank you! The roof is pitched slightly. I built the front end a bit higher up. I couldn't give you exact angles as it was a few years ago, but I felt it would help with shedding moisture and create a natural vent.

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem

      I'm so sorry. I just realized you asked about the run and not the house! The run roof is pitched slightly too! We have 2 eight foot sections and we pitched them both! We just added a 2x1 to the middle. Enough to have the drainage run off the side.

  • @stevenmckinney4174
    @stevenmckinney4174 Před rokem +3

    I hadn't thought about moisture from their poop. Do you clean that out more often in the winter then the summer?

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem +1

      We do deep box method, actually. We don't clean it out more often in the winter but we cover it with more bedding. It's actually a good insulator that way.

    • @stevenmckinney4174
      @stevenmckinney4174 Před rokem

      @@sacredlysimple Interesting. I'll have to research that more.

  • @ellieross9472
    @ellieross9472 Před 2 měsíci +1

    How did you make that sliding ventilation?

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před 2 měsíci

      It's just the cutout from the vent we cut. We hold it in with a block with a single nail so it swivels. If we want the vent partially open we just offset it.

  • @bikeoffrd1196
    @bikeoffrd1196 Před 9 měsíci

    I have a shed 10x16 with two vents 6x10 inches, one vent on each gable end. The coop is 4ft x10ft x7ft tall. Built inside one end of the shed. The coop has a ceiling with 4 vents above the chickens for ventilation to the gable end vents. Question and my concern is are the gable end vents large enough or should I add one additional vent same size to each gable end? TY

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před 9 měsíci

      The main thing is getting moisture out of there. Also the ammonia vapers from the droppings. If you feel it's doing those two things then you're alright.

  • @mustangg236
    @mustangg236 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Should you insulate your chicken coop?

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před 5 měsíci +1

      You certainly can As long as there is still good ventilation. The hardest part is insulating it in a way that the chickens won't peck at it. Ours isn't insulated and we get down to the -20s some days in the winter.

    • @mustangg236
      @mustangg236 Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks for the info.

  • @johnnycash5520
    @johnnycash5520 Před rokem

    Just don't use that kind of wood it's extremely poisonous to chickens and is bad for their eggs I love the concept of your video I just don't want to see no chickens being harmed on accident

    • @sacredlysimple
      @sacredlysimple  Před rokem +3

      I have a video addressing why I use this wood.

    • @DavidFarmallow
      @DavidFarmallow Před rokem +2

      It's no worse than any manufactured wood... Plywood, etc..