problems with chick to chick introduction

rehsanipoor

Songster
6 Years
Jan 29, 2018
273
188
156
Baltimore, MD
I'm hoping someone can help us figure out how to handle our current situation. We have 3 (2 dark brahma and 1 easter egger) chicks that are a little over 3 weeks. Today we brought home 6 new chicks (4 cuckoo marans and 2 black laced wyandots). We introduced them today. They are in a very roomy brooder inside our home. Everything was going peachy. One of our brahma's is smaller than other and likes to be under the heat plate which I had lowered a lot for the new gals. After a few hours going smoothly the smaller brahma ("Daisy") began showing aggression towards the newbies. Pretty sure she felt crowded and didn't like sharing the heater. Eventually she grabbed on of the littles and flipped it onto it's back. I quickly removed her and we put a screen down the middle of the brooder with the bigger girls and little girls separated.

On the big girl side I made a "fake" heating plate out of scrap wood and put a heating pad under it which I think is enough heat for Daisy. She is currently not even on the heating pad and seems content. I left the "real" heat plate on the newbie side. Now I'm wondering how long I keep this arrangement and how I go about testing Daisy out with the new girls. I'm hoping she comes to like her new heated set up and the little girls will give her space.

Last bit of info: The two other older chicks did great with the new ones. Is it okay to separate only Daisy?

I'd love to get some thoughts and advice. Sorry for rambling!
 

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You're doing exactly what I'd do. Give Daisy a day or so of being alone. You could also sprinkle some of their feed along both sides of the screen; then Daisy has to eat near the others, including the new chicks.

Give her another chance in a day or so, see if she's acclimated.

I'm hoping others will chime in in more ideas.
 
Right now I have the three big girls together. Should I put the two that are doing well with the chicks back on the Little's side leaving Daisy alone on her side?
 
I would separate all the older ones from the younger for a few days simply due to size difference, and because very young chicks are still unsteady on their feet. After a few days or maybe a week the younger ones should be steady enough so they're less likely to get crushed or trampled.
 
What @rosemarythyme said :)
This year I have a lot of small batches of chicks coming out of the incubators, so we're often integrating different ages. I find it goes best if the youngest are really confident in this life stuff before mixing them with chicks older than a week.

I also take advantage of situations that make older birds less confident. Changing coops or moving from brooder to coop is the perfect time. Adding more together is easier than just a few. If I have to sort birds for sale / keepers, right after the stress and losing friends, and just before dark, is a good time to plop some more birds in. They see each other as flock mates because they've clung together through (mild) adversity. It's the silver lining to an otherwise sad task.

Right now, our main grow-out coop has three 4-week-olds, eight 6-week-olds, and two 4-month-olds (1 was sick and another was kept back as her sweet friend). It's really peaceful except that when the oldest girls want to eat, the babies aren't allowed. When the roost is too full (my limiting factor rather than sq ft), I'll move the biggest in a bunch to the big flock coop, and probably leave the smallest to integrate the next batch of chicks.
 
What @rosemarythyme said :)
This year I have a lot of small batches of chicks coming out of the incubators, so we're often integrating different ages. I find it goes best if the youngest are really confident in this life stuff before mixing them with chicks older than a week.

I also take advantage of situations that make older birds less confident. Changing coops or moving from brooder to coop is the perfect time. Adding more together is easier than just a few. If I have to sort birds for sale / keepers, right after the stress and losing friends, and just before dark, is a good time to plop some more birds in. They see each other as flock mates because they've clung together through (mild) adversity. It's the silver lining to an otherwise sad task.

Right now, our main grow-out coop has three 4-week-olds, eight 6-week-olds, and two 4-month-olds (1 was sick and another was kept back as her sweet friend). It's really peaceful except that when the oldest girls want to eat, the babies aren't allowed. When the roost is too full (my limiting factor rather than sq ft), I'll move the biggest in a bunch to the big flock coop, and probably leave the smallest to integrate the next batch of chicks.
Wow Sour Roses! I can't imagine how you manage so many. I only have 9 and am losing my mind! They've been separate for a couple days and the little guys are acclimating nicely. You might be a good one to ask this to:

Right now they are all in my living room :( When they are big enough I plan to move them out to the coop we are currently constructing. My bigger girls will be ready before my new ones. There's a 3 wk difference. I'd rather not delay the move as I'd like to reclaim my home! How would you manage this? Should I put them all out during the day and move the little ones in at night? I'm hoping temps will be pretty warm during the day but cooler at night. I could also put the chick heater plate out in the coop.

Happy to get anyone's advice.
 
When they are big enough I plan to move them out to the coop we are currently constructing. My bigger girls will be ready before my new ones. There's a 3 wk difference. I'd rather not delay the move as I'd like to reclaim my home! How would you manage this? Should I put them all out during the day and move the little ones in at night? I'm hoping temps will be pretty warm during the day but cooler at night. I could also put the chick heater plate out in the coop.
How old will they be (both older and younger groups) at that point, you reckon? I don't know what the ETA is on your coop.

If let's say it's 3 weeks from now, what would your average temperatures be at that point?

Unless the coop is pretty much already done, I'm guessing you can move both groups out simultaneously, especially since you mention you can run a heat plate out.
 
Yes, so I was thinking in about 3 weeks. We should have the coop ready by then. Google says avg. temps where I am in June are 60 - 82. The bigger girls will be over 6 weeks and younger a little over 3.
 

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