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On Raising One's Own Meat (and Poultry for Eggs), With Some Discussion of the Attendant Pleasures and Dilemmas


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We had a nor'easter hit us late this past week, and brought a little taste of Real Winter (TM) with it. Temperatures around us hit -16 to -18C, with wind chill (the "feels like") dipping into the -20s (for Americans, the former translates to "almost 0 F," and the latter "0 and below"). 

 

So that was a good test for our newly -revamped and -insulated quail shed. I filled some seams around the door frames with expanding foam, put a draft blocker along the top of the doors where there was a relatively wide gap, and some weather stripping along the edges of the doors where they met each other and the door frame. With a local ambient temperature of -14C according to the thermometer on our deck, the temperature inside our quail cage was just -1 at the level of the top row of cages. Upon further investigation, there was about a 4-5 degree gradient from the top row of cages to the bottom, so I'll probably look around for a little USB fan or something similarly low-powered to push the air around and mitigate that. 

Overall, though, I'll call it a success. Only a couple of waterers on the lower tier froze up, and that was easily fixed by dunking them into a bucket of warm tap water for a few moments. That thaws them enough to twist off the base and knock out the ice, and then I refill them with warm water. The plan going forward is to have a gravity-fed watering system with an insulated bucket, and siphon hoses running to actual clip-on waterers on the front of the cages, which would be protected by the kind of heating wire used to keep plumbing from freezing in cold climates. We have all the fixin's at present except the hose, because the tees that go between the hose and the waterer require a size of flexible tubing that we can't buy locally. Grr. 

 

So yeah, it's on order and hopefully will get here in time to be of some use during the winter. The bucket will have an aquarium heater in it, and despite the insulation will probably lend a little bit of heat to the interior. At present the only source of BTUs is the quails' own body heat, and the LED panels we use to provide supplemental lighting. Those don't throw a lot of heat, by design, so it's mostly the quail themselves. 

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