Author: Anna & Mark

We use environmentally friendly packaging

Avian Aqua Misers are packaged in simple cardboard boxes.We strive to keep our Avian Aqua Miser
business as green as possible.  We’ve chosen to sell our waterers
only over the internet so that we don’t have to fit our products into
shiny packages that end up landfills.  Instead, we use simple
envelopes and cardboard boxes that are easy to recycle (or throw in
your worm bin.)
  We even drive them out of our farm in an
electric golf cart — how much greener can you get?



We hope that our
waterers will also do their part to cut down on Americans’ consumption
of treated drinking water.  Chickens that drink out of traditional
chicken waterers tend to waste a gallon or two of water per day by
spilling, or by filling the reservoir with poop.  With the Avian
Aqua Miser, you only need to put out the water your chickens will
actually drink!




So don’t be surprised
when your waterer arrives in a simple cardboard box or envelope —
just think how much better off our world would be if all products came
without the extra packaging.

Automatic chicken waterers make trips easy

Chicken tractor with two automatic chicken waterers.Although their cleanliness is a bonus, I have
to admit that my favorite part of Mark’s
automatic chicken waterer
invention is the way they allow us to take trips away from the farm
without worrying.  When we used traditional chicken waterers a
couple of years ago, I was afraid to leave our girls unattended for
more than a day at a time.  Now, we have no problem spending up to
four days away from home.




It’s pretty simple to
know how long your Avian Aqua Miser will last.  Each chicken
drinks a little less than half a cup on a cool day, but I like to
figure a cup or two a day apiece just to be on the safe side.  A
pre-made Avian Aqua Miser holds 16 cups, so it will safely water one
bird for at least 8 days.  We throw an extra waterer in each
tractor when we’re heading out of town, but if you’ve made a
bucket waterer
you may not need to add any extra water at all.  Wouldn’t it be
nice to make those holiday visits without worrying about your chickens
going thirsty?

Winter chicken tractor care

Golden comet hens in a chicken tractorHere in zone 6, we’re able to
leave our chickens out in their tractors all year.  We have a
water- and wind-proof section where they can roost at night (or during
drippy days), and we never see any sign of our chickens being too
cold.  In fact, tractor life seems to suit them — their yolks
are still as orange as summer eggs even though it’s the middle of
December.




We do make a couple of
changes to prepare our chickens for winter, though.  As the days
get chilly, we flip our tractors 180 degrees around so that the sun can
shine directly in.  (During the summer, we put the solid side to
the sun so that our birds have some shade.)  We are also more
careful to move the tractors every day, since cold, wet soil can
quickly be churned into a morass of mud.




And, of course, we have
to be a bit more vigilant
to
prevent our chickens’ waterers from freezing
.  Still, care of our
nine hens probably takes no more than ten minutes a day, thanks to our
automatic chicken waterers and Mark’s handy
tractor-building skills.  I always recommend that folks make the
switch from coop to tractor as soon as possible!