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Barnyard Buddies: chicken galvanized waterer |
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maguiren
Farmgirl in Training
21 Posts
Nancy
Kirkville
New York
USA
21 Posts |
Posted - May 17 2011 : 12:06:37 PM
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Does anyone use anything other than the plastic or galvanized round waterers? Our galvanized one has a pinhole leak in the bottom and gets rusty even though I religously change-out the water everyday. I hate to invest in a new one, and just wondered if there was any creative alternatives.
Live everyday to the fullest because no one is promised tomorrow
"my sister", Jeanne O'Herien |
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oldbittyhen
True Blue Farmgirl
1511 Posts
tina
quartz hill
ca
USA
1511 Posts |
Posted - May 17 2011 : 1:04:33 PM
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I have always used the galvanized waters and feeders, they way out last the plastic. As far as small holes, use aquarium leak sealer, it is non-toxic, and will hold for yrs,use a fine sandpaper to clean the area of the hole and to ruff it up abit, makes the sealer stick better, plug the hole with a dab, then wipe with your finger out from the dab about a 1/2 in.
"Knowlege is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad" |
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maguiren
Farmgirl in Training
21 Posts
Nancy
Kirkville
New York
USA
21 Posts |
Posted - May 17 2011 : 3:07:04 PM
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thank you, oldbittyhen, for your advise. Do you know if it will stand up to heat?
Live everyday to the fullest because no one is promised tomorrow
"my sister", Jeanne O'Herien |
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kristin sherrill
True Blue Farmgirl
11303 Posts
kristin
chickamauga
ga
USA
11303 Posts |
Posted - May 17 2011 : 3:42:25 PM
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I use whatever I can find. I have some real heavy black rubber water trough bowl like things that I use for the chickens. And I have an old metal bowl in one of the coops. I used to use the metal waterers but they get too slimey dirty. And they would get dirt and shavings all in the rim. So I just use bowls up on blocks or bricks.
Kris
Happiness is simple. |
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oldbittyhen
True Blue Farmgirl
1511 Posts
tina
quartz hill
ca
USA
1511 Posts |
Posted - May 17 2011 : 6:37:12 PM
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Nancy, yes it will stand up to heat, lol, I live in the high desert, in Southern California, we can get up to 120 degrees in the summer, and below 0 in the winter, so it has always worked well for me. Kristen, if you set the waters up on a platform ( 2 to 3 ins high), such as a clay pot saucer upside down, they won't scratch dirt and other things into the water. I make them out of scrap wood and hardware cloth also, that way you don't get muck build up under neath and the air can get to the dampness...
"Knowlege is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad" |
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Barnyard Buddies: chicken galvanized waterer |
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