2 questions - feathers and temperature.

tbneff

Hatching
10 Years
Mar 27, 2009
1
0
7
Hi,
My first time on the forum. I just purchased 7 barred rock pullet chicks and it looks like some are a few days older than others. They are now a little over 3 weeks old. My first question is this: all the chicks pretty much have feathers all over their body except for one. She has feathers just on the edge of her wings and just little tiny tail feathers forming. She is eating well, drinking well and interacting with the others just fine. Her body is growing normally, her feet are getting as big as the others. She just doesn't have feathers. Is this something I should be concerned about? My second question is concerned with temperature. At first I had the chicks in a cardboard box in a room in our house. But the birds quickly got too big for that. So I built a bigger box to give them more room and this box has to stay in the basement (with a warming lamp on them). The basement is about 10-12 degrees cooler than the upstairs house. I was a little concerned that it might be too cool for them. This evening I put a thermometer in the box to see how warm it was and found that it was about 78 degrees. Is this too cool for 3 week old chicks? I read somewhere that the first week should be 90 deg and then 5 deg cooler every week after that.
BTW, I love this site and this forum. Good stories and good information.
 
I've had a few chicks over the years that were just slow to feather. Usually they turned out to be my prettiest birds once they did.

I think temp wise you're ok. If they're not huddled together chirping they're not too cold.
 
How do they act when they are awake? Do they move to the edge of the brooder, or squish together under the heat? Do they run around or are they sleepy looking? How do they sleep -- all spread around, piled together, or what?
 
Their behavior is a better indicator than the thermometer. I have a brooder that maxed out at 120 degrees under the bulb, but the chicks aren't hugging the edges, they make a ring around the bulb, but are not huddled, in other words - comfy.

I think late to feather is also a sign of a possible roo. Like all clues though its not definitive.
 

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