Caroline
Well-known member
I am curious as to what the minimum temperature is that chinchillas can tolerate?
When I had the chin house I'd heat minimally, it wasn't abnormal for it to be 55 in there, occasional if I didn't get the propane switched over before it ran out, it'd freeze, my water lines would literally be frozen by morning and I never saw any ill effects of it. I know many larger show ranchers have rooms that are colder specifically for their show animals to thicken the coats, but I'm not sure what the temp they use is.
I have not spoken with her yet about it. The thought came to me today as I was driving home. There is the summer heat and how cold it gets in there to consider. I do not want to have a flame in the barn with all that hay, sawdust and horses. Not only would I not want to put any horse's life in danger but two of my horses are on the endangered species list.I am moving my horses to a new barn and she has extra stalls that she will not be filling with horses. It only gets below a little below freezing for a few days in the winter and the rest of the time it is in the 30's and 40's. Am wondering if it would be safe to keep my chins in her barn without the risk of them freezing?
You could possible run a layer of foam insulation around the stall to enclose and insulate it and kind make it a small room and that might help a lot. What is the current situation causing your to sell Caroline?
I've never had problems with kits getting too cold. I've also talked with ranchers who told me that the cold will slow my production, but I've looked at my records and my biggest months are usually April and May, and considering I usually keep my barn the coldest from Dec-Feb, I'm not too sure how that could be. My slowest months are always in the dead of winter, and I keep my barn 60-65 in the summer, so the cold doesn't seem to be affecting the production at all here, but my production seems to be better when it's colder based on my records.
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