Tag Archives: winter

Winterizing the Quail

Quail, like chickens, are extremely hardy and don’t need heat lamps during the winter.  Last year, our temps got down as low as 12 degrees, and I wrote a whole blog post on keeping chickens happy and healthy through the winter, including links to people keeping them in far colder climes than mine.  Please, people, I know you love your chooks, but don’t heat your coops!  You’re harming them, not benefiting them.  Proper ventilation is what chickens need, to keep them comfortable and frostbite free.

Anyway, this post is about the quail.  They didn’t mind the cold at all last winter, but this year, I decided to try something new.

I filled their coops with straw.  A thick, deep layer of straw.

I know they like to burrow under things, so I figured they would love this.  They did.  They started making little tunnels and holes immediately.

It made me think of hobbit holes, so I added even more straw…on top of their little houses.  From the front of the coop, you can’t see the houses at all.

But when you walk around the coop and look in the back…

….yup, there it is.  Do you see little Nefertari in there?  They are happy quail.

The only one who was a little concerned by this was the male.  Cinna lost all this girls, and couldn’t see them anywhere!  He started panicking and doing the alarm call, the girls answered from under the straw, and he finally located them and all  was content again.

This is a test.  I don’t know if it will work out once the weather turns wet and nasty again.  The straw may get icky, and I’ll have to scoop it out – leaving just what’s inside the shelter of the houses, like I normally do.  We’ll see.

Winter is Definitely Here

It normally doesn’t get that cold here where I live.  Sometimes we have a little snow, sometimes we don’t.  It normally dips a little below freezing for part of the winter, but not by much.

I love that about our winters.  I am not a winter person.  If it never got below fifty degrees, I would be very happy.

This year, though…wow.  Already we’ve had more than a week of really cold temperatures.  As in twelve degrees, which is highly unusual.  It’s made for some interesting times caring for the outside critters.  I hate having to deal with frozen water!

Fortunately, the animals themselves aren’t that bothered.  Chickens are exceptionally cold-hardy – temperatures of twelve degrees are nothing to them.  They sit around with their warm downy coats of feathers puffed up and complain because the ground is frozen and they can’t dig for worms, but they are perfectly fine.  I’ve gone into their coop late at night and their feet are toasty warm, and when I put my fingers into their feathers I can feel the heat radiating up from their bodies.

Really, the absolute worst thing you can do for chickens is give them artificial heat during the winter.  The temperature is not a problem (unless you live somewhere really cold, and have the wrong breeds).  The biggest issue is not enough ventilation – or too much of the wrong kind.

Chickens don’t mind cold.  They do mind cold wind, so you need to be sure their coop is protected from drafts.  Our coop has year-around vents surrounding the top of the coop.  Air can circulate, but it’s all above the heads of the chickens, so they aren’t in a draft.  If you don’t have enough ventilation, humidity builds up in your coop, and that’s horrible for chickens.  It dampens their feathers, so they can’t puff up and keep themselves warm.  If you ever have condensation on the inside of your coop, you don’t have nearly enough ventilation – and besides being cold, your chickens are at serious risk for developing respiratory illnesses.

Please, don’t use heat lamps.  Ever.  Besides being a horrible fire risk (I’ve already heard about a bunch of coops catching fire and burning up with the chickens trapped inside) it makes your Girls more cold, not less.   Chickens have a variety of techniques to keep themselves warm.  Besides puffing their feathers, they eat more to produce inner heat, and they can actually shrink the size of their combs to conserve heat.  They will do none of these things if they have a heat lamp, so every time they walk out from under it, they will suffer from the cold.  And if you happen to lose power, and your heat lamp goes off?  That’s when they can actually freeze to death!

Things like frostbite rarely (if ever) happen to chickens if you keep them out of drafts and damp.

My Girls are just happy it’s warmed up enough now that they can go hunt for bugs again!

The quail I was a little concerned about, since I am largely unfamiliar with how they do in cold weather, and the info from the internet was contradictory.  In the end, I covered one end of their run with tarps to make sure they had a draft-free area, and also made sure they had enough nest boxes (stuffed with shavings and hay) for everyone to go into if they wanted to be warmer.

They didn’t.  Even in the 12 degree weather, they spent the nights out in the most unprotected parts of their pens.  When I’d go out in the morning, their water would be frozen rock-solid, but they’d be happily walking and jumping around like always.  I couldn’t see the slightest difference in their behavior.  Such a relief.  Now I know I can treat them like chickens and not worry about them!

And the rabbits?  Again, we just made sure they had water to drink, and they were fine.  They also chose to sleep in their lower, more exposed, area, rather than in their lovely upstairs nest.

Crazy animals.  It just seems like they should be miserable, just because my fingers started aching with cold every time I was out there tending to them – but instead they just couldn’t understand why I didn’t want to sit outside with them and have a nice chat…like we do in the summer.

Here are a couple of excellent links if you want more info about winterizing your animals:

http://hencam.com/henblog/2009/12/winter-care-for-chickens/

http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2013/11/surviving-winter-with-chickens.html

Snow and Snow Ice Cream

I was snowed in today and didn’t have to go to work!

Here’s a couple pictures taken in my garden:

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snow2

And here’s two taken on my street:

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But the best thing about snow days (other than not having to work!) is making real snow ice cream.

Snow Ice Cream

2 eggs, well beaten

1 cup milk

1 cup cream

1 cup sugar (or 3/4 cup honey)

1 tablespoon vanilla

1/4 teaspoon salt

bucket of fresh, clean snow


In a 2 quart bowl, mix beaten eggs, milk and cream. Blend in sugar, mixing well. Add vanilla and salt. Put into a gallon container and gradually add snow, mixing well, until of desired consistency. Serve immediately (melts fast!) or freeze. Makes about a gallon.