patandchickens
Crazy Cat Lady
Remember they don't need water overnight. Therefore it may make more sense to either dump the (by then possibly iced anyway) waterer when you close things up for the evening, or take the (getting icy) waterer into the house with you overnight to thaw.
In addition, you can get a certain amount of mileage out of insulation for the waterer. I have fooled around with this just enough to get the sense that a good design could probably buy you at least half a day extra on liquidity-of-water, probably more if you start with hot water. So that might be a fun project for wintertime, to experiment with
Really, having no electric in the coop is NOT a big deal in terms of water in cold winters, AS LONG AS somebody is around during the day to bring out water occasionally. The only problem is if you leave for work at 6 a.m. and don't return til 7 p.m. and it's -20 F *inside the coop* most of the day. But it doesn't sound like that's your situation.
BTW the double-walled things are BAD for wintertime -- not only does it take very, very little to freeze them up (moreso than most white-and-red plastic waterers, IME) but when they freeze solid with a significant am't of water in them it will bust the welds on the metal and they become scrap.
Good luck, have fun,
Pat
In addition, you can get a certain amount of mileage out of insulation for the waterer. I have fooled around with this just enough to get the sense that a good design could probably buy you at least half a day extra on liquidity-of-water, probably more if you start with hot water. So that might be a fun project for wintertime, to experiment with
Really, having no electric in the coop is NOT a big deal in terms of water in cold winters, AS LONG AS somebody is around during the day to bring out water occasionally. The only problem is if you leave for work at 6 a.m. and don't return til 7 p.m. and it's -20 F *inside the coop* most of the day. But it doesn't sound like that's your situation.
BTW the double-walled things are BAD for wintertime -- not only does it take very, very little to freeze them up (moreso than most white-and-red plastic waterers, IME) but when they freeze solid with a significant am't of water in them it will bust the welds on the metal and they become scrap.
Good luck, have fun,
Pat

) -- absolutely you would not want to put HOT-hot water anywhere they could directly drink it!!
In the morning I carry out warm water from the house, break out and dump the ice and re-fill with warm water when I open the coop. The girls line up for their warm water drink. If I am not working I check it mid-afternoon, but the coop is pretty warm and there is usually just a skim. If I am working and getting home very late, in the morning sometimes I have a beak-shaped hole in the ice where they kept one little hole open to drink from. I used to think I wanted electric in the coop for a heater, but on the whole it isn't worth it- I go out to the girls anyway I might as well carry some water with me. I carry it in a gallon thermos so it stays warm.