AkHenMama

In the Brooder
I hope if you have a ventilation question you can read this and look at your coop to assess whether or not your ventilation is active or passive and which will help keep your animals happier and healthier!

Active ventilation: forces air movement.
Passive ventilation: relies on nature to move air.

When referring to ventilation there are two types: active and passive. Passive is usually just an opening that allows air movement, think open window or a peak vent. Active is something the forces air movement, think a fan or motorized exhaust vent.

As I was writing out my description of my problem I realized I had no ‘active ventilation’ only an extreme amount of ‘passive ventilation’. This ‘passive’ style was allowing freezing cold air into my coop and not moving any of the moisture out. A big problem for chickens in frigid/moist climates.

To fix this, I put hard foam insulation in my top ‘passive vents’ to stop cold air and outside moisture from getting in. There are now only 2 exterior vents, passive, that are away from their roosting bars so there is no cross draft. Next, we added a small fan (4” diameter) to create ‘active ventilation’ on one open ‘passive vent’ and that has made the coop dry AND SUPER WARM! After I did this I put my hand in at night after an hour of the coop being closed up, it was WARM and the ammonia smell was almost gone. Temperatures outside that day were in the teens and the girls had been enjoying the cold winter sunshine from the comfort of their run.

I have one heating plate I put in for my girls, the one I used for them as chicks, that is mounted to the wall away from the roosting bars. It is a small amount of ambient heat. Not enough to turn outside temperatures into a cozy environment for my girls inside.

A bit of proof it has worked. During our first cold snap with only ‘passive vents’ we were down to 2 eggs a day. Now that we have, mostly, sorted out the ventilation we are back to 5-7 eggs a day even after our most recent cold snap! And yes, I use artificial lights to simulate an earlier sun rise but only in the run.
 
I hope if you have a ventilation question you can read this and look at your coop to assess whether or not your ventilation is active or passive and which will help keep your animals happier and healthier!

Active ventilation: forces air movement.
Passive ventilation: relies on nature to move air.

When referring to ventilation there are two types: active and passive. Passive is usually just an opening that allows air movement, think open window or a peak vent. Active is something the forces air movement, think a fan or motorized exhaust vent.

As I was writing out my description of my problem I realized I had no ‘active ventilation’ only an extreme amount of ‘passive ventilation’. This ‘passive’ style was allowing freezing cold air into my coop and not moving any of the moisture out. A big problem for chickens in frigid/moist climates.

To fix this, I put hard foam insulation in my top ‘passive vents’ to stop cold air and outside moisture from getting in. There are now only 2 exterior vents, passive, that are away from their roosting bars so there is no cross draft. Next, we added a small fan (4” diameter) to create ‘active ventilation’ on one open ‘passive vent’ and that has made the coop dry AND SUPER WARM! After I did this I put my hand in at night after an hour of the coop being closed up, it was WARM and the ammonia smell was almost gone. Temperatures outside that day were in the teens and the girls had been enjoying the cold winter sunshine from the comfort of their run.

I have one heating plate I put in for my girls, the one I used for them as chicks, that is mounted to the wall away from the roosting bars. It is a small amount of ambient heat. Not enough to turn outside temperatures into a cozy environment for my girls inside.

A bit of proof it has worked. During our first cold snap with only ‘passive vents’ we were down to 2 eggs a day. Now that we have, mostly, sorted out the ventilation we are back to 5-7 eggs a day even after our most recent cold snap! And yes, I use artificial lights to simulate an earlier sun rise but only in the run.
This was super helpful!!!! I’m struggling with the same issue but I will try your solution! Thanks!
 
Do you have pictures of your set up to help us see what you are talking about?
Took a minute due to holidays but here is where we are at!
The red door is shut at night and the main passive ventilation becomes the vent on top. The window does not open.

Initially the interior passive vents were open and it was much colder and wetter inside. They are now sealed with rigid pink insulation so warm air stays in and cold air stays out. Except the lower passive vent furthest from the roosting bars which has a 4” fan, 3rd picture, which turns it into an active vent. In the future we will add an exhaust fan with a humidistat and remove the small vent fan.
The heat source is the small plate heater I used when they were chicks.
 

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Took a minute due to holidays but here is where we are at!
The red door is shut at night and the main passive ventilation becomes the vent on top. The window does not open.

Initially the interior passive vents were open and it was much colder and wetter inside. They are now sealed with rigid pink insulation so warm air stays in and cold air stays out. Except the lower passive vent furthest from the roosting bars which has a 4” fan, 3rd picture, which turns it into an active vent. In the future we will add an exhaust fan with a humidistat and remove the small vent fan.
The heat source is the small plate heater I used when they were chicks.
It is going to be 23⁰ here today in TN. It is 68% humidity outside and inside my coop 76% and 38⁰ right now. I'm worried they are going to get too cold tonight. My rooster has a large comb and wattle. I am hoping they will be ok. They are orpingtons and barred rocks. I think I may get one of these fans to help pull out moisture and make it a little warmer in there.
 
I hope if you have a ventilation question you can read this and look at your coop to assess whether or not your ventilation is active or passive and which will help keep your animals happier and healthier!

Active ventilation: forces air movement.
Passive ventilation: relies on nature to move air.

When referring to ventilation there are two types: active and passive. Passive is usually just an opening that allows air movement, think open window or a peak vent. Active is something the forces air movement, think a fan or motorized exhaust vent.

As I was writing out my description of my problem I realized I had no ‘active ventilation’ only an extreme amount of ‘passive ventilation’. This ‘passive’ style was allowing freezing cold air into my coop and not moving any of the moisture out. A big problem for chickens in frigid/moist climates.

To fix this, I put hard foam insulation in my top ‘passive vents’ to stop cold air and outside moisture from getting in. There are now only 2 exterior vents, passive, that are away from their roosting bars so there is no cross draft. Next, we added a small fan (4” diameter) to create ‘active ventilation’ on one open ‘passive vent’ and that has made the coop dry AND SUPER WARM! After I did this I put my hand in at night after an hour of the coop being closed up, it was WARM and the ammonia smell was almost gone. Temperatures outside that day were in the teens and the girls had been enjoying the cold winter sunshine from the comfort of their run.

I have one heating plate I put in for my girls, the one I used for them as chicks, that is mounted to the wall away from the roosting bars. It is a small amount of ambient heat. Not enough to turn outside temperatures into a cozy environment for my girls inside.

A bit of proof it has worked. During our first cold snap with only ‘passive vents’ we were down to 2 eggs a day. Now that we have, mostly, sorted out the ventilation we are back to 5-7 eggs a day even after our most recent cold snap! And yes, I use artificial lights to simulate an earlier sun rise but only in the run.
Do you have any suggestions on what type and where to place ventilation in my coop? I am taking the picture from the door which is at the roof practically and the back is taller than the front. It is 38⁰ and 77% humidity in the coop and 68% humidity outside. It is supposed to be really cold this weekend and next week. I wanted to fix the ventilation and make it warmer for them before then. I have 7 chickens total.
 

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It is going to be 23⁰ here today in TN. It is 68% humidity outside and inside my coop 76% and 38⁰ right now. I'm worried they are going to get too cold tonight. My rooster has a large comb and wattle. I am hoping they will be ok. They are orpingtons and barred rocks. I think I may get one of these fans to help pull out moisture and make it a little warmer in there.
Too cold for a chicken (that is not silkied or frizzled) is nowhere near 23°F. The humidity is more of a concern for causing frostbite in your area than the temperature. Adding vents is a must. Locate vents on opposite sides of the coop for proper cross ventilation.
 
Took a minute due to holidays but here is where we are at!
The red door is shut at night and the main passive ventilation becomes the vent on top. The window does not open.

Initially the interior passive vents were open and it was much colder and wetter inside. They are now sealed with rigid pink insulation so warm air stays in and cold air stays out. Except the lower passive vent furthest from the roosting bars which has a 4” fan, 3rd picture, which turns it into an active vent. In the future we will add an exhaust fan with a humidistat and remove the small vent fan.
The heat source is the small plate heater I used when they were chicks.
What size is your henhouse area? Rooster in particular and spacing of them. Thank you!
 
It is going to be 23⁰ here today in TN. It is 68% humidity outside and inside my coop 76% and 38⁰ right now. I'm worried they are going to get too cold tonight. My rooster has a large comb and wattle. I am hoping they will be ok. They are orpingtons and barred rocks. I think I may get one of these fans to help pull out moisture and make it a little warmer in there.
It immediately felt warmer in our coop once we add the fan to move moisture out, I hope that helps you and your flock too!
 

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