Heated chicken waterer for seasonal flock care

Seasonal Care

Keep your flock healthy through every season: warmth in winter, cooling in summer, molting support, fall and spring prep, the truth about heat lamps, and managing rain and mud.

Keeping Chickens Warm in Winter

Chickens tolerate cold better than heat. How to keep your flock healthy in winter with dry bedding, ventilation, draft control, and unfrozen water, no heat lamp needed.

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Keeping Chickens Cool in Summer

Heat is far more dangerous to chickens than cold. Keep your flock cool with shade, cool water, airflow, and electrolytes, and learn to spot and treat heat stress.

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Winter Coop Care

Winter coop care is about dryness and ventilation, not heat. Prep the coop with deep bedding, open high vents, unfrozen water, wide roosts, and draft control.

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Do Chickens Need a Heat Lamp?

Adult chickens almost never need a heat lamp, and heat lamps are a leading cause of coop fires. Safer alternatives, when heat is justified, and what chicks need.

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Molting Season Care

Molting is a natural annual feather change that pauses laying. Support molting chickens with higher-protein feed, low stress, and gentle handling.

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Fall Flock Care

Fall is prep season: support the molt, ready the coop for winter, reinforce predator defenses, and give the flock a pre-winter health check.

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Spring Chicken Care

Spring brings renewed laying, warmer weather, and new chicks. Deep-clean the coop, check for mites, handle broody hens, and start chicks safely.

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Chickens in Rain and Mud

Chickens handle rain fine with a dry refuge, but a muddy run causes real problems. Manage drainage, footing, and a dry coop through wet weather.

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Backyard Chicken Keepers Planner

10 printable worksheets to track your flock's health, eggs, feed, and coop care.

Get the Planner for $39