Author: Anna & Mark

Heated chicken waterer ideas

Kats engine oil heaterSeveral readers have emailed
me ideas for creating a heated chicken waterer, but all of them say
that they haven’t tested the heaters on their flock.  That’s good
news for anyone wanting to enter our
homemade
heated chicken waterer contest
since you’re free to steal
these ideas and run with them.




First, from Billy Ray:


Your
quest to find a inexpensive water heater for the winter seems pretty
easy to me. Grew up in Kansas and we had cold winters up there. Live in
Dallas now since 1977 and it is much better here. Anyway a simple
solution would be to buy a Kats engine oil heater  model #15200
[$11.99 at Northern Tool and Equipment] put it inside a copper tube and
plug it into a timer.  Have to experiment with the on off time
then insert it into the top of your bucket style
waterer
(wrapped in thermal wrap like for a home water heater)
through a drilled hole and presto you’re done. A more expensive way
would be to buy a 35 dollar circulation type engine water heater and
install it with a timer to run for 20 minutes every 2-3 hours or to
keep the water warm but not let it freeze.  I have designed a
simple method like this for a cattle water trough with the
recirculating pump.



Heated horse bucketNext, Felice Quilici
suggested:



Loved the post on Julie’s
pegboard watering system
.  I have an idea
about winter time problems.  What about an heated horse bucket and
an
home made wooden lid with a hinge in the middle* to accommodate filling
up the bucket as needed?



(*a two part, half circles lid with a
hinge in the middle.  Hope that makes sense!)



Zoo med reptile heaterFinally, Naomi Meyer chimed
in:



I don’t want to enter this into the
contest since it isn’t a “design”
but more of an easy quick fix. I have a small urban flock and reused a
small stick-on reptile heater
that we had from a previous pet on
your
waterer. It keeps the water from freezing but doesn’t really heat it.



For those of you who
might be taking any of these ideas and turning them into your contest
entry, I would add the tip that you need to be sure to focus on the
nipple since it’s the first part of any system to freeze.  I look
forward to seeing your entries!



Our homemade chicken
waterer
keeps the
flock happy and healthy with clean water.

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.

Aquarium heater makes heated chicken waterer

Chicken waterer made out of a kerosene canIt’s pretty simple really,
just insert a 25+ watt submersible aquarium heater inside an
appropriate closed container such as a CLEAN / NEW kerosene can and
plug it into a thermostatically controlled plug (can buy off the
internet). Works well into the 20s, doesn’t get too much colder that
that here.




My guess is it would
work at any temp if you gauge the heater wattage appropriately. 
Do note: the last heater I bought said “don’t use in freezing
weather.”  I’m not sure I understand that as a caution but I could
imagine it might have something to do with the amount of “time on
heating.” My thought is the plug in thermostat takes care of that
concern because it cuts the heater off at 42/44.  Please remember
though, I’m talking about SC where daytime temps almost always get
above freezing.  If I were in a colder climate I would call the
heater mfg and get technical advice–I still bet it works!!




— Mike Boynton



For
readers who want to follow along at home, Mike started with one of our homemade chicken
waterer kits
and followed our simple instructions to make his
waterer.

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.

Adding heat tape to a chicken waterer

Adding heat tape to a chicken waterer to keep it from freezingMy name is Jim Hoffman, and
we live in New Bern, NC. We have used
your little red
clicking waterer accessory
for a few months now. We
installed three of them on the bottom of a 3 gallon drinking water
container available at Lowes or Home Depot.




They work great until
the weather got cold and the temperatures wanted to freeze the water
and the clicker accessory. What we did, is purchased a electric heat
tape cord, also available at Lowes or Home Depot in the pipe section.
They come in 3 lengths, 12 feet, 18 feet or 28 feet I think. Not very
expensive. Simply wrap the black part of the cord in a spiral format
around the tank to cover the most surface area.




Bucket chicken watererWe put our water on a stand
with galvanized legs. Attached the sensor to the galvanized leg to
measure temperature. When the temperature falls below 36 degrees, it
comes on automatically to insure bottle temp does not freeze. Also goes
off automatically. It provides just enough heat to keep the temp above
freezing and also keeps the clicker accessory from freezing as well.
Takes very little power to run as it is thermostatic.




Keep plug out of reach of chickensWe
use packing tape to secure cord to water jug and make sure chickens did
not pick at it. We also kept the plug connection outside the cage for
the same reason and out of chicken reach. Hope the idea helps you all.




— Jim Hoffman

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.