Heated chicken waterer experiments

Heated chicken waterersThe time has come to think
about
heated
waterers

again.  For those of you who haven’t been following along, you can
read the last couple of years worth of experiments by following the
link above.  If you’re more of a facebooker, you can see my
favorite heated chicken waterers in visual form
here.



Even though we like
several of the heated waterer options we’ve used and seen, there’s
still room for improvement.  Our
heat
tape chicken waterer

did a great job last winter, keeping the flock’s drinking water thawed
until we hit a low in the mid teens, but I think the design could use
some work on the ease-of-construction side.  Perhaps this
ultra-cheap
heated bucket
would
make a good starting point?




Homemade heated watererI
also want to make the insulation a bit more high tech (and less
clunky).  Roland pointed out that a circle of sytrofoam on top of
the lid would be a great addition to our Reflectix wrap, and I also
want to improve on the wrapping design.




Meanwhile, as I was
perusing old photos, I remembered
Marvin
Bartel’s old design

from a few years ago.  I wonder if a thermocube plus a better
heating element could help keep the nipples thawed at yet lower
temperatures.




Any new heated chicken
waterer designs kicking around out there?  I’d love to see your
photos — email them to
info@avianaquamiser.com and I’ll share them on the
blog.




We recommend our 3 pack
DIY kit
for making a
heated waterer for up to 50 chickens.  The CD that comes with each
kit includes complete instructions to help you build our favorite
heated options without any trial and error.




The heated waterer
we use in our own coop requires two buckets,
a
three foot length of pipe heating cable
($23), and the contents of
our kit.  With a layer of
chicken-friendly
insulation
, the
waterer is good down into the teens.

Energy savings from an Ecoglow brooder

Three week old chicks with brooderAfter six rounds of chicks,
our
Ecoglow
brooder
is still plugging along, although it is showing signs of
wear.  The power cord (or power
brick?) is starting to flake out on us, but Mark
wiggled the cord until it worked and then taped it in place, and the
brooder seems to be willing to continue providing warmth for our chicks.



While I’d like the unit
to last forever, I have to admit that it’s probably already paid for
itself even if we have to get a new power cord next year.  I
figure we’ve used the brooder for about 4,000 hours so far, which
provides an energy savings of about 532 kwh, or $65.  Since we
paid $60 plus $16 shipping, as long as we can eke one more round of
chicks out of the brooder (and I hope we can do several more), we will
have come out even.




(I’m actually a little
astonished, typing this, that the brooder saved so much electricity, so
you might want to check my math.  People use various types of heat
bulbs with chicks, but for a small backyard flock, 150 watts seems to
be average.  The Ecoglow brooder uses 18 watts.  I could get
away with taking the heat source out after three weeks, but I usually
let our chicks keep it for four weeks.  So I figure 4 weeks X 7
days X 24 hours X 6 sets of
Good night chickschicks = 4032 hours of using
the brooder so far.  At a savings of 132 watts, I’ve avoided using
532,224 watt-hours of electricity, or 532 kilowatt-hours.  My
electric bill tells me we’re currently spending about 12.3 cents per
kilowatt-hour, so that comes to a savings of $65.)




Since Amazon
has started selling Ecoglow Brooders
(with free shipping), when
we end up having to replace our unit, we’ll be able to get it for
$59.99.  Maybe I should go ahead and order one so that when ours
flakes out, we’ll have a spare ready to slide into use?



Our chicken waterer keeps the youngsters well
hydrated and their bedding dry from day 1.

Choosing a mulberry pruning method

Chickens with mulberryMulberries are a permaculture favorite,
and there are lots of theories zipping around the internet about how
best to integrate them into a homestead.  When it comes right down
to it, all of the methods revolve around pruning — do you prune the
tree at all, and if so how?




Mark’s the one who
brought this issue to my attention, because he’s been watching our two
year old Illinois everbearing mulberry grow like a weed in the chicken
pasture all summer.  “Do you think we’d end up with more fruits
for the chickens if we pruned our mulberry small and mashed a lot of
trees together, like in a
high
density apple orchard
?”
he asked.




I’m glad Mark raised the
question, because I’d been assuming we’d just let the mulberry grow to
tree size and do its thing.  Various websites explain that it’s
not really essential to prune a mulberry tree, and I know of several
big, unmanaged trees that I stole fruits from as a kid — they seemed
to bear heavily.




Mulberry leavesDespite not needing to prune a mulberry tree,
there are various reasons you might
want to.  In permaculture
circles, lots of folks
coppice
mulberry trees, using the wood and leaves as a source of organic matter
(and as fodder for herbivorous livestock).  A
fascinating report by the FAO
suggests that you get the
most leaf production if you cram mulberries close together and cut them
often — optimal spacing seemed to be 2 feet apart, with cuttings
every 112 days.  This study was carried out in a tropical setting,
so you probably wouldn’t see the 8.5 tons of dry matter per acre here
in the U.S., but mulberries still might beat the average 3 to 5 tons
you’d get from a grass and clover hayfield.



Mulberry ripening

Of course, as I’ve
mentioned previously, chickens aren’t really leaf-eaters.  Another
study (included in the FAO report) found that you can replace up to 9%
of your chicken’s daily ration with dried mulberry leaves without
lowering egg production, but I read the same thing about
duckweed, which our spoiled flock was
supremely uninterested in.  Instead, I want to focus on fruit
production since I know our chickens will scarf down lots of berries.




PollardingMulberries produce fruits on
last year’s wood, so straight coppicing is out if you want fruit
production.  On the other hand, if you remove only half the
branches each year, your mulberry bush can produce fruits on the old
wood while growing new branches for next year’s crop.




For even more
efficiency, I’m considering pollarding, which is just like coppicing,
but keeps a trunk and three to five branch stubs instead of cutting the
tree to the ground each year.  Annual pruning involves removing
the twigs on half of the the pollard stubs, while leaving the other
half to bear fruit.  This way, I won’t have to worry about
chickens damaging the tender young growth that would come up from a
traditional coppice each spring.




What will I do with all
the wood I cut out?  I plan to try
rooting
hardwood cuttings

next year, which will let me fill the chicken pastures with little
mulberry bushes.  Or so I hope!  Stay tuned for more posts on
my pollarding and propagation experiments.



A chicken waterer at the far end of the
pasture keeps the flock spread out so they don’t scratch any one spot
bare.