Caring For Chickens In The Winter

Warm weather is winding down as cooler weather moves in, bringing a taste of the coming winter. As well as preparing your home for the long winter months, it’s time to prepare your urban chickens for winter. With a possible cold, wet winter and prolonged subzero temperature in many areas of the country, ensuring your chickens’ comfort makes happy chickens and the urban chicken farmer’s life easier. Providing proper care to your flock regardless of the season is essential. Chickens need specialized care in winter, just as in summer. Even if your chickens stop producing eggs during winter, putting forth the effort to keep them comfortable and healthy helps them start the spring and summer laying period in prime condition. Preparing backyard chickens for winter is not difficult if you follow a few simple rules. Chickens are hardy creatures, with many breeds more tolerant of cold than others. Some cold, hardy birds include Orpingtons, Dominiques, Rhode Island Reds, Ameraucanas, Black Giants, and Brahmas. This is the most important step to caring for chickens in any season. Your chickens need suitable housing to protect them from predators and the elements. Good Housing Ventilation – Good ventilation allows dissipation of moisture caused by the chicken’s breath during the winter and provides a fresh air source during the summer. Your first instinct is to plug every hole in the chicken coop, thinking it will keep your birds warm—don’t do it. In cold weather, chickens spend more time roosting in the coop, and good airflow removes moisture. Roosting chickens creates moisture, allowing condensation inside the coop and creating cold and damp conditions, which are unhealthy for your chickens. The moisture settles on combs and wattles, causing frostbite. You need good ventilation but not drafty. Drafts in direct line with chicken roosts are dangerous. If your chicken house has windows or vents, keep them open just enough to give airflow but not wide enough to cause drafts on roosting chickens. Cold drafts can kill a roosting chicken, so make sure your ventilation only allows the air to circulate, keeping the moisture down. As an Amazon Associate, I earn commission from qualifying purchases which helps with website upkeep. Heat – No…no…and no again. Okay, I know there is much debate about this, especially in colder, northern climates. Our winters in Oklahoma rarely have long cold spells with subzero temperatures; our winters usually stay above freezing. However, my grandparents kept chickens in harsh environments with no heat in the henhouse, only suitable winterization. My dad’s parents lived in northern Ohio while my mother’s lived in northern Iowa; both kept flocks throughout the winter, with rarely a loss. The biggest problem with heating your coop and preserving a warmer temperature is that chickens only feather out in light down and not their full winter plumage. If you lose power for any time, your heat source is gone, and chickens aren’t acclimated to the colder temperatures. We have ice storms in the winter, so losing electricity is common. If we kept our chicken coop heated, we might lose some chickens. All heating sources are dangerous. If you feel you must heat, follow the manufacturer’s safety precautions for your heat source. Coop fires are common in winter, making safety a must. Heat bulbs are a common heating source. Hang them with sturdy clips, out of the way where chickens can’t knock them into bedding and cause a fire. I recommend oil-filled radiant heaters instead of heat lamps. These heaters won’t subject the flock to long-term illumination, causing egg production system damage. Whatever heat source you use, keep it at a low temperature, no higher than 25° F, to avoid molting those extra layers of feathers. I suggest letting them grow their downy “underwear” and not offering any artificial heat unless it gets cold for long periods: -20° F or below. If you decide not to heat your coop, provide ventilation without drafts and plenty of bedding and litter with enough depth to provide insulation. Never “overstuff” the house with straw since it sweats and causes fungal growth, leading to respiratory illness in chickens. Mucking it Out – This is done weekly, regardless of the season. During the winter, you may need to increase mucking depending on how much time the birds spend in the house. For harsher climates, I suggest 2-3 times weekly. Feed and Water No matter the season, fresh feed and water are vital to a healthy flock. Chickens need constant access to water as well as feed. Feeding – The winter food consumption rate varies depending on the weather, so giving chickens free access to food is recommended. To provide extra energy and help keep birds warm during the night, provide small amounts of corn or other slow-burn grain before roosting. During slow egg production in winter, try reducing the calcium and protein and increasing calories to help keep birds warm. Decrease protein intake to 17 percent by switching from layer rations to scratch. Scratch is low in protein and high in calories. I also reduce calcium by reducing oyster shell availability. I like giving my hens a break from heavy egg production during the winter months, but if you prefer keeping egg production going, increase protein with sprouting. Watering – Disinfect both drinkers and feeders with good-quality disinfectant once a week. Rinse well with hot water and dry before refilling. In places like Oklahoma, we are usually above freezing during the day, so icing water isn’t a significant problem except at night. If you have constant freezing temperatures, water will need to be free of ice. Keeping drinkers sheltered and breaking the ice as it forms keeps water supplied. However, not everyone can do this, so another consideration is placing the drinker on a heated platform or buying a heated drinking unit. As an Amazon Associate, I earn commission from qualifying purchases which helps with website upkeep. Never add anything to water that may stop freezing. This will seriously harm your chickens. As an Amazon