Freezing temps make animal care chores more challenging. How do you manage?
We bring out water 2x to 3x a day.
Only when it freezes solid too quickly do we plug in the electric heater, a stock tank de-icer.
When we had horses we would run a hose (3 lengths, about 150 feet of hose) from the upstairs house faucet to the barn. We would turn the water onto super hot and fill their water trough. There was a heating element in the bottom of the water trough, and we had it boxed up, insulated, and half the top covered.
When we had more poultry we would consolidate them as much as possible for winter.
We now have 2 winter coops.
We designed the coops so we don't have to do any snow shoveling.
I don't heat the coops. I once, many years back had a heat lamp in the winter. I went into the coop and the gust of cold air that came in with me made the heat lamp shatter all through the bedding.
Never again heat lamps in winter, too dangerous.
When we had goats we had a warm-up box for new kids. That was a heating pad duct taped into a freezer ziplock in a cardboard box.