PrairieHollow
In the Brooder
- Nov 28, 2021
- 7
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- 24
Hi- We are in MN and are entering our first winter with chickens this year. We had a pretty windy, cold day yesterday, and I think a few of our chickens got a little frostbite on combs and wattles. Most of them look pretty good, but one, the one with the largest comb, seems to have gotten the worst of it. We didn't notice it yesterday when we put them back in the coop (with their food and water) after realizing they were getting frostbite, but this morning, her comb is standing up (we call her Floppy because she had this big comb that would just lay flopped over on her head), and is swollen and part of it is discolored. I'm sure it's frostbite, but am not sure the best thing to do for her at this point. Do I need to bring her into a warmer area and do some doctoring of it, and if so, what?
I'm pretty sure the problem occurred with the wind and cold outside, not in the coop overnight, but I can't say for sure. We plan to wrap plastic around the run to block the wind and elements, but hadn't gotten to doing so yet. There's mostly dirt/rocks in the run, but we have put several bales of straw out for them to dig through there as well, and they are clustered around those areas so we'll be putting more straw out there especially where there is a roof covering the run, and more bare ground is showing.
We have ventilation in the coop and it is well constructed, not drafty, also not insulated, not heated at this point, but we do have a heater we could install (one of those panel heaters that you put on the wall). Just trying to figure out what's the best way to set them up in the coop. I also read some about using a deep litter method to absorb moisture and generate some heat in the winter in the coop. I do have a thermometer in the coop (on the coop wall) that shows the minimum temperature, which last night got down to 6 Fahrenheit. Should we be heating the coop to some degree, and how much? We do have the 2x4 roosting bars.
Trying to figure out the best way to manage this frostbite in Floppy, and as well if there are other measures we should take with the other chickens to prevent it as well. And any insight into best ways to manage them during colder days/nights would be helpful. We weren't sure if we should just keep them in the coop on colder days and if so, how much cold (temp and windchill) can they tolerate?
I have read about putting coconut oil or vaseline or comparable on the combs/wattles to protect, but don't know if this is advisable if there is already some frostbite.
Also, we're new at this, and have a coop, but don't really have any kind of setup to isolate one of the chickens if there is a need to do so. What are some ideas people use to do that?
Thanks for any insights!
I'm pretty sure the problem occurred with the wind and cold outside, not in the coop overnight, but I can't say for sure. We plan to wrap plastic around the run to block the wind and elements, but hadn't gotten to doing so yet. There's mostly dirt/rocks in the run, but we have put several bales of straw out for them to dig through there as well, and they are clustered around those areas so we'll be putting more straw out there especially where there is a roof covering the run, and more bare ground is showing.
We have ventilation in the coop and it is well constructed, not drafty, also not insulated, not heated at this point, but we do have a heater we could install (one of those panel heaters that you put on the wall). Just trying to figure out what's the best way to set them up in the coop. I also read some about using a deep litter method to absorb moisture and generate some heat in the winter in the coop. I do have a thermometer in the coop (on the coop wall) that shows the minimum temperature, which last night got down to 6 Fahrenheit. Should we be heating the coop to some degree, and how much? We do have the 2x4 roosting bars.
Trying to figure out the best way to manage this frostbite in Floppy, and as well if there are other measures we should take with the other chickens to prevent it as well. And any insight into best ways to manage them during colder days/nights would be helpful. We weren't sure if we should just keep them in the coop on colder days and if so, how much cold (temp and windchill) can they tolerate?
I have read about putting coconut oil or vaseline or comparable on the combs/wattles to protect, but don't know if this is advisable if there is already some frostbite.
Also, we're new at this, and have a coop, but don't really have any kind of setup to isolate one of the chickens if there is a need to do so. What are some ideas people use to do that?
Thanks for any insights!