Watering for winter

Iwantgoats

Ridin' The Range
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
120
Reaction score
7
Points
64
Location
Somewhere Over the Rainbow
This will be our first winter with goats and we live in NY State. I don't have electric in my stalls but am going to run an extension cord to hook up a heated waterer for the winter. Any suggestions on type of waterer to use? Do goats like snow? I am assuming they will still go outside. Don't need heat, right?? Thanks
 

ksalvagno

Alpaca Master
Joined
Jun 1, 2009
Messages
7,899
Reaction score
49
Points
263
Location
North Central Ohio
Goats don't need heat but they do need to be able to fully get out of any elements including wind, rain, snow, etc. I just use heated water buckets or bird bath heaters in 5 gallon buckets.
 

Chirpy

Loving the herd life
Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
612
Reaction score
30
Points
188
Location
Colorado
As long as your goats have a draft free, dry enclosure (which you should have with stalls) then they will be just fine through the winter. Some goats have no problem with snow, some won't walk on it. Mine won't go out into deep snow (deep to them is a few inches or more!) but will walk through a trace or inch of snow.

I have thought about using a heated bucket for their water but my concern is how much goats love to 'mouth' everything. You want to make sure they can't get to the cord and that it is a covered cord that can't be chewed on. I also know that most heaters add up on the electric bill and I can't afford to pay lots to keep my animals water from freezing. I just carry a lot of buckets and change out their pails regularly. It takes more time but... it's free.

Hopefully some goat owners who have actually used heaters will chime in here and teach us both something. :D
 

goodhors

Overrun with beasties
Joined
May 15, 2010
Messages
863
Reaction score
18
Points
79
Hate to be a nay-sayer, but running extension cords is really a bad idea in a farm setting. Tank heaters pull a LOT of electric power, and a cheap cord can heat up and cause a fire. Running your heater underpowered, will cause the heater to die early. They just burn out quickly!

With weather still in the good days, soft ground, you should consider putting in an outdoor, GFCI outlet where you need it for powering the tank heater. You can run the wire thru conduit or bury it in the ground to your needed location. Wiring to supply the outlet is a much bigger gauge than extension cord, so electric power has an easier time delivering ENOUGH power for the heater.

Running underpowered heating devices, overloading your circuts to or from the barn, is asking for trouble. Fire in the barn is a common story in the winter paper. Wiring or outlets heat up, melt or spark, cause fires. People complain about the "darn circut keeps blowing out" when the extension CORDS get plugged in, but CHANGE NOTHING. I have seen heaters WAY OUT YONDER in the tank, using 2-3 extension cords plugged together for power. You LOSE measurable power with each plug connection. Cords get damaged when they get driven over, chewed on by animals, lay in wet places on the ground!!

My eyes get REAL BIG, and I point out the possible problems that can happen. Usually I hear about the circut blowing often, heaters dying after only a short use time. Owners prefer not to make things different, "too much work. This has been fine for us".

So putting in an outdoor outlet or several, where you need them, will make winter water a lot easier to deal with, and your barn much safer as well.
 

Mea

Overrun with beasties
Joined
Mar 13, 2010
Messages
673
Reaction score
2
Points
84
Location
upstate New York
Iwantgoats said:
This will be our first winter with goats and we live in NY State. I don't have electric in my stalls but am going to run an extension cord to hook up a heated waterer for the winter. Any suggestions on type of waterer to use? Do goats like snow? I am assuming they will still go outside. Don't need heat, right?? Thanks
We din't have heaters for the animals water buckets in the barn... but we do carry hot water out twice a day during the cold months . the way goaties like to chew... i would be uneasy about anything electrical within their nosey noses.

Back in the day...:old , our Alpines might step outside...if there were clear patches to walk on, and the sun was shining, and we put some hay out, and we vigorously encouraged them Out... and, and, and... then they would be right back in the barn.

Our current goats, Nubians,:love Would much rather Not venture out thankyouverymuch.

Our barns have been unheated, but we try to keep wind and drafts out, and do allow the bedding to accumulate as that does generate some heat. Then during a thaw...Must clean barn !!!
 

Beekissed

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
3,634
Reaction score
5,551
Points
453
Location
mountains of WV
I run extension cords to my coop and barn and have for the past 5 years now...no problems with my heated buckets yet. The heated buckets have cords that are protected by wire coils around the cord....no chance of chewing there but, if you are worried, just set the bucket by your fence and leave the cord on the other side.

I use the heated 5 gal. buckets for my dogs and my sheep with great success...they don't use a lot of heat, the water is barely pea warm, if that. They don't register on my utility bills at all...no increase during the winter months.

My dog's bucket is going on 5 years old now and still in great working order, despite always being plugged into extension cords....actually, I use a total of about 4 50ft. cords plugged into each other to reach all the way to my sheds.

The other great thing about these buckets is that you can coil the cord into the bottom of the buckets in the nice little compartment intended for this use and you can use these same buckets all year. They are practically indestructible!
 

aggieterpkatie

The Shepherd
Joined
Oct 23, 2009
Messages
3,696
Reaction score
11
Points
156
I don't use any heated buckets or de-icers. I have a shovel and a sledge hammer for the trough. :) Or if I use buckets I dump the buckets twice a day and refill them.
 

cmjust0

True BYH Addict
Joined
Jul 10, 2009
Messages
3,279
Reaction score
9
Points
221
The concern about extension cords is a valid one. Very, very valid. The wiring in most homes is either 12ga or 14ga wire, for 20a or 15a circuits, respectively (though some folks put 15a breakers on 12ga wire to be extra safe, and some folks put 20a breakers on 14ga wire because they're stoopid -- point being that you can't necessarily *know* whether you've got 12ga or 14ga house wire by looking at the circuits).

What happens when you run A/C appliances over long distances (either through extension cords, or simply because a house is wired poorly) is that you get a voltage drop....most appliances are designed to run on 115 volts, but at a long distance from the breaker box, you may get significantly less than that.

That's what causes appliances to 'die' young.

The other problem -- the one I'd be most concerned with in this situation -- is that if you run appliances which pull lots of amperage (and a stock tank de-icer is a good example!!) through long, thin extension cords (anything less than 12ga, really...most common extension cords are 16ga or maaaaaaaybe 14ga), the wires will begin to heat up.

When the wires heat up, they can either burn in half and begin to 'arc' (an arc being an open flame, basically) or melt the insulation off and begin to arc, or simply heat up enough to melt the insulation and the wires will set a nearby combustible item on fire.

IF YOU MUST run an extension cord to a de-icer, move the tank as close to a GFCI outdoor outlet on the house as you possibly can, and run the shortest heavy-duty cord (like, a 12ga cord!) possible.

We have a tank de-icer on an extension cord. It's a heavy cord, and the tank's a short distance from the house.. The outlet it runs on is a GFCI circuit, and it's not very far from the breaker.

Still, when it snows, snow won't stick to the extension cord. The cord is warm enough from the draw of the de-icer that it melts snow.

Obviously, NOT IDEAL.

I have plans to run an aerial power-company-sized dropline from a 60A circuit off my main house panel to a 60A grounded subpanel in the barn, from which I'll run short 12ga GFCI circuits. I already have the wire and a utility pole...just gotta set the pole and figure out what circuits to combine in my house, since the electrician seems to have run a seperate 12ga wire to EVERYTHING in my house and filled up the entire panel..

:lol: :/

But, seriously...if you're going to run an exension cord, THINK ABOUT IT REALLY, REALLY HARD FIRST.
 

chandasue

Overrun with beasties
Joined
May 30, 2009
Messages
863
Reaction score
3
Points
89
We have the same problem with no electrical in the barn but we did put it in the coop right next to it so we run an extension cord from there and take the risk. One of the many requirements of our next place is electricity to the goat house. But for now we have to make do. :rolleyes:
 

freemotion

Self Sufficient Queen
Joined
May 19, 2009
Messages
3,271
Reaction score
22
Points
236
Location
Western MA
Having experienced a barn fire years ago, I am super careful. No bucket heaters or extension cords (except when I am standing there doing something.) A friend's cat woke her up in the middle of the night and insisted that she go a door on the opposite side of the house, that was not her normal routine. When my friend opened the door, she saw the heated water bucket in the paddock (outside, thank goodness) in flames, and the water pouring from the bucket over the flames yet somehow not dousing them. If she hadn't seen it, the barn would've ignited next and they would've lost all their animals. The kitty got a new name, Fire Kitty, and all the treats she wanted for quite a while after that.

You can make an insulated water bucket by placing your water bucket inside a larger one and filling the space in between with shavings and straw. I use a feed pan with a water bucket inside it. Filled with warm water, this will stay liquid for quite a few degrees below freezing.

For an even better solution, when I had my horse, I used a muck bucket and a five gallon pail. I cut a "donut" from plywood that fit on top of the muck bucket with a hole for the pail. I filled the space in between with foam packing peanuts and other scraps of packing foam, and filled the rest with "Great Stuff." Screwed the plywood to the muck bucket. That thing would get a 1/4 inch of breakable ice in only extremely cold weather, like -10F. I figured it was liquid until they went to sleep, and I changed the water first thing in the morning, so no one went without water for long.

I don't use it now as it is too tall for my pygmies, and everyone lives together. I've been thinking of making a shorter version, but the shavings/straw thing is working, and you know how that goes.....

The bigger one makes a great cooler for drinks at barbecues in hot July weather, though.....ice stays frozen ALL day! :lol: I've also used it as an insulator to make jars of goat's milk yogurt.
 
Top