I've been reading these forums for the past 6 months... lots of great content, lots of different opinions :-). I have been looking for the best setup for our 2 boars who will be housed outside over the winter. They are 12 months old and have been enjoying the freedom of our garden for the last 6 months, but not the temperature is dropping I was looking to come up with a solution. This is what I've got so far, and I must say I'm pretty pleased with it. Why am I sharing it? 2 reasons... 1 to get feedback from people on anything I might have forgotten, and 2 to put this out there as an alternate option for those that can't have their pigs inside or even in a shed.
Hutch Cover
We purchased our hutch second hand, and it came with a waterproof and thermal fitted cover. This was excellent at keeping it cool in the summer and to some degree it kept it warm overnight so far this year, but there was a particularly cold night about a month ago where the internal temperature of the hutch dropped to under 10C. This is when I realised I would have to do more.
Snuggle Safe
Upon reading these forums, I purchased one of these. Not much effect on the ambient hutch temperature, but I guess it gave one of the pigs something to snuggle up with for the first few hours at least. But the claim it lasts 12 hours is simply not true. Mine was stone cold in less than half of that. And having 2 boars meant that we would need 2 as they won't sleep in same part of hutch. Factor in the hassle of having to go the back of the garden in the middle of the snow/rain to come, and I figured I needed more.
Tubular Heater
I purchased one of these from Screwfix (UK). Its 40W and 30cm long. I attached this to the smallest room in their hutch and left it on full whack. It seemed to add about 6C to the outside air temperature. Perfectly good for Autumn/Spring, but I when the temperature goes into sub 10C I figured it would struggle.
Thermal Insulation
Next step was to better insulate the hutch. I purchased this from Wickes and using a staple gun, covered the inside of the top floor of the Hutch. This proved to make a HUGE difference. With the heater on full whack, the overnight temperature in the Hutch was 24C (so hot I had to go outside in the middle of the night and turn it down!). This was +12C on the outside air temperature. So just by lining the internal walls of the Hutch with this made nearly enough of a gain that I felt only on the coldest of nights I might need a little more.
A bigger tubular heater - Now the trial of the other Dimplex heater was over, I added an 80W heater to the remaining upper floor space. I added this so that both pigs could get a good nights sleep as they don't typically sleep in the same room.
A pet blanket - I added a 40x50cm heated pet blanket. This was a case of 'just in case' but I'm not sure I'll need it.
The Finished Hutch
Hutch Cover
We purchased our hutch second hand, and it came with a waterproof and thermal fitted cover. This was excellent at keeping it cool in the summer and to some degree it kept it warm overnight so far this year, but there was a particularly cold night about a month ago where the internal temperature of the hutch dropped to under 10C. This is when I realised I would have to do more.
Snuggle Safe
Upon reading these forums, I purchased one of these. Not much effect on the ambient hutch temperature, but I guess it gave one of the pigs something to snuggle up with for the first few hours at least. But the claim it lasts 12 hours is simply not true. Mine was stone cold in less than half of that. And having 2 boars meant that we would need 2 as they won't sleep in same part of hutch. Factor in the hassle of having to go the back of the garden in the middle of the snow/rain to come, and I figured I needed more.
Tubular Heater
I purchased one of these from Screwfix (UK). Its 40W and 30cm long. I attached this to the smallest room in their hutch and left it on full whack. It seemed to add about 6C to the outside air temperature. Perfectly good for Autumn/Spring, but I when the temperature goes into sub 10C I figured it would struggle.
Thermal Insulation
Next step was to better insulate the hutch. I purchased this from Wickes and using a staple gun, covered the inside of the top floor of the Hutch. This proved to make a HUGE difference. With the heater on full whack, the overnight temperature in the Hutch was 24C (so hot I had to go outside in the middle of the night and turn it down!). This was +12C on the outside air temperature. So just by lining the internal walls of the Hutch with this made nearly enough of a gain that I felt only on the coldest of nights I might need a little more.
A bigger tubular heater - Now the trial of the other Dimplex heater was over, I added an 80W heater to the remaining upper floor space. I added this so that both pigs could get a good nights sleep as they don't typically sleep in the same room.
A pet blanket - I added a 40x50cm heated pet blanket. This was a case of 'just in case' but I'm not sure I'll need it.
The Finished Hutch
With