Wendy Bee
Songster
I know it's only August, BUT . . .
Winter IS coming!



. . . and I've been pondering winterizing for this, our third winter of chicken-keeping. My dream the first year was 30 gauge marine vinyl, but it was out of reach, with the cost of the material itself, as well as the added cost and hassle of cutting, sewing strapping, and installing grommets. No thank you!
So we spent a little less than $100 on a 25 yard roll of 48" wide thin vinyl which we attached to the run with furring strips. That worked beautifully for the first winter, and okay for last winter, with clear-ish inexpensive tarps added where the thin cheap vinyl had failed.
Criteria for this winter for me were:
I'll post on the details of what I'm planning at a later date, but I did find a good source for marine grade vinyl TARPS - not just the material - but tarps with polyester strap edging with grommets (Hallelujah)! Available in MANY sizes and in both 20mil and 30mil weights.
The first source is The Tarps Wholesaler. Shipping is not free, so depending on where you live, the second source, Amazon, may work better for you, though the prices are significantly higher on Amazon (because free shipping is not always free, lol). But distance as well as weight figures into shipping for The Tarps Wholesaler, so plugging in what you want at each site will tell the tale for your story. If you live outside of New York State, The Tarps Wholesaler site says they will not charge sales tax, so that may tip things in your favor, even with shipping costs.
Examples of sizes and weights available:
From The Tarps Wholesaler
One quirk I did notice with their website - I needed four 6x8 tarps, but if I put in 4 from the product page, it came back as out of stock. If I put one in the shopping cart from the product page, and then increased the count IN the shopping cart, I was able to get what I needed.
The Amazon Listing
Again, the prices on Amazon are significantly higher, but with "free" shipping. And you'll pay sales tax with Amazon, no matter where you live.
Also again, the prices on The Tarp Wholesaler are much lower, but shipping will be determined by weight and distance. However, no sales tax if you live outside of NYS, so depending on the size of your order, it might be a work out well for you =o).
I do live in NYS, but even with sales tax and shipping cost, I was able to get the heavier 30 mil tarps on The Tarps Wholesaler site for a lot less than I would have paid on Amazon for 20 mil tarps of the same size - like I saved $52!
One drawback to The Tarps Wholesaler is no free returns (you pay return shipping, and they refund cost of product with no restocking fee, or they'll replace the item), but customer service (they were great in answering a couple of questions I had) said that their quality control is very good, while with Amazon, sometimes you get what you get.
Reviews are good for these tarps on both sites, so I'm trusting that all will be well with my order with The Tarps Wholesaler.
I'm doing this now, in August, because I want to be READY and not SCRAMBLING when it gets cold this year! Nothing like getting dirty looks from cold, annoyed chickens
!
Winter IS coming!



. . . and I've been pondering winterizing for this, our third winter of chicken-keeping. My dream the first year was 30 gauge marine vinyl, but it was out of reach, with the cost of the material itself, as well as the added cost and hassle of cutting, sewing strapping, and installing grommets. No thank you!
So we spent a little less than $100 on a 25 yard roll of 48" wide thin vinyl which we attached to the run with furring strips. That worked beautifully for the first winter, and okay for last winter, with clear-ish inexpensive tarps added where the thin cheap vinyl had failed.
Criteria for this winter for me were:
Clear, durable, reusable for multiple years, cleanable, storable/roll-up-able, easily put-up-able and take-down-able wind breaks that I could put up and take down as needed without hubby's help, and which could be folded down for not-so-cold-ish days for extra airing out beyond normal ventilation.
I'll post on the details of what I'm planning at a later date, but I did find a good source for marine grade vinyl TARPS - not just the material - but tarps with polyester strap edging with grommets (Hallelujah)! Available in MANY sizes and in both 20mil and 30mil weights.
The first source is The Tarps Wholesaler. Shipping is not free, so depending on where you live, the second source, Amazon, may work better for you, though the prices are significantly higher on Amazon (because free shipping is not always free, lol). But distance as well as weight figures into shipping for The Tarps Wholesaler, so plugging in what you want at each site will tell the tale for your story. If you live outside of New York State, The Tarps Wholesaler site says they will not charge sales tax, so that may tip things in your favor, even with shipping costs.
Examples of sizes and weights available:
From The Tarps Wholesaler
One quirk I did notice with their website - I needed four 6x8 tarps, but if I put in 4 from the product page, it came back as out of stock. If I put one in the shopping cart from the product page, and then increased the count IN the shopping cart, I was able to get what I needed.
The Amazon Listing
Again, the prices on Amazon are significantly higher, but with "free" shipping. And you'll pay sales tax with Amazon, no matter where you live.
Also again, the prices on The Tarp Wholesaler are much lower, but shipping will be determined by weight and distance. However, no sales tax if you live outside of NYS, so depending on the size of your order, it might be a work out well for you =o).
I do live in NYS, but even with sales tax and shipping cost, I was able to get the heavier 30 mil tarps on The Tarps Wholesaler site for a lot less than I would have paid on Amazon for 20 mil tarps of the same size - like I saved $52!
One drawback to The Tarps Wholesaler is no free returns (you pay return shipping, and they refund cost of product with no restocking fee, or they'll replace the item), but customer service (they were great in answering a couple of questions I had) said that their quality control is very good, while with Amazon, sometimes you get what you get.
Reviews are good for these tarps on both sites, so I'm trusting that all will be well with my order with The Tarps Wholesaler.
I'm doing this now, in August, because I want to be READY and not SCRAMBLING when it gets cold this year! Nothing like getting dirty looks from cold, annoyed chickens
