Good morning! I hope everyone and there pets stay warm the next few days with all the cold weather across the states!
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Bottom line is to use the rule of thumb that for the first week, chicks should have a spot 90-95 and 5 degrees cooler each week till they're feathered out(that can vary with strain/nutrition/acclimation) or when the declining brooder temperature is close to ambient. I try not to brood outside if, even using hover brooders, I can't get the temperature into the 20s. I don't know where you live so I don't know what temperatures you're looking at. If it is above 50 outside, I just hang a couple brooder lamps/emitters. If it is colder or I have a lot of chicks I set up my homemade version of Ohio brooders. It's always warm under there and spots over 100 degrees. The chicks usually end up sitting along the edge where the brooder heat comes out and meets the cold air. Use their activity as your guide. If they're cold they'll huddle close to the heat source. If they're hot they'll disperse far from it and if it's just right they'll be scattered.it's okay I guess I didn't realize all the variables! I guess a better question would be, when can i move my chicks out of the house(8 EEs) and how could i make the coop warm enough? I was also thinking putting my 250W heat lamp in the coop for a few days with a thermometer that records highs and lows and see what the temp gets down to st night without the added heat generated by the birds. I just don't want to lose them to the cold but I am running out of options for space in the house
I'm trying, I really am.Good morning! I hope everyone and there pets stay warm the next few days with all the cold weather across the states!
Yes, & this one is a small egg so I shouldn't be suprised.
Also I did nudge up the temp & add water last week so again, no big surpise really, just not great timing as
I'm about to fall asleep on the cat in my lap, having spent 10 hrs canning today, plus dealing w/ weather & trying to make a hard decision re: our much loved Farm Dog "Dew" who's declining health has taken a sharp downturn in the past 48 hrs <sigh> , he once risked his life going into the street in front of a car to heard a lost week old chick back to the yard...
http://weather.yahoo.com/united-states/Alaska/Fairbanks-12799759/@ak-flock-swap I hear your temps are much higher today than ours.
Only bad thing about having dogs. Hope you got some sleep, didn't lose power, and your hatch goes well.![]()
I know exactly how hard a decision like that is. This Sunday marks a year since I lost my beloved Shelby, who was an Australian Shepherd mix. We made the decision three days prior to have her put down, and God gave us three days to say our goodbyes (the vet was booked until that Saturday). Her liver and kidneys were shutting down, and even if we tried to have the vet fix her up, he said there was only a 5 percent chance she'd make it through the surgery because of her age (she was 11). My husband, both my boys (who were 7 and 9 then), and I were there with her when she passed. Hardest thing I had to endure in a very long time, but I didn't want her to die with strangers. So we all sat with her, petting and talking to her, as the vet gave her the injection.![]()
You'll make the right decision for Dew. When we love our pets as we do our children, it is often one of the hardest decisions we ever have to make, but doing what is best for our pet, and not ourselves, is the responsibility we take on when we become pet owners. Good luck to you, and give Dew a hug from a complete strangerfor me!![]()
Bottom line is to use the rule of thumb that for the first week, chicks should have a spot 90-95 and 5 degrees cooler each week till they're feathered out(that can vary with strain/nutrition/acclimation) or when the declining brooder temperature is close to ambient. I try not to brood outside if, even using hover brooders, I can't get the temperature into the 20s. I don't know where you live so I don't know what temperatures you're looking at. If it is above 50 outside, I just hang a couple brooder lamps/emitters. If it is colder or I have a lot of chicks I set up my homemade version of Ohio brooders. It's always warm under there and spots over 100 degrees. The chicks usually end up sitting along the edge where the brooder heat comes out and meets the cold air. Use their activity as your guide. If they're cold they'll huddle close to the heat source. If they're hot they'll disperse far from it and if it's just right they'll be scattered.
Healthy chicks are tougher than people give them credit for. I've had chicks escape into the woods at night that I couldn't find. I figured they'd either freeze or get eaten, only to have them show up in the morning looking for mom.
I'm trying, I really am.
My plan after dark last night was to move all the roosters to one building and run a propane heater in there to get the temp up to about 20 or 25.
Then move all the hens to two buildings and move all adolescents to their own apartment to share body heat. After trudging across the tundra carrying roosters I gave up. I blocked off the open sides of the remain building with 90% shade cloth on one side and plywood on the other side. I looked in and both groups were hunkered down and I thought they would be better off staying put.
Quote: Dag it is warmer in Alaska then OhioMy windows are covered in ice. But it looks like its going to get to you on Friday and then we will be back to normal again. How do you handle all the darkness, that would be a downer for me. I'd never get anything done. I'd be in bed by 4pm![]()
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I'm hanging in there but I don't recall having chickens with big combs at these temperatures since I was young.http://weather.yahoo.com/united-states/Alaska/Fairbanks-12799759/
yep ..not to bad @ all for us..Then again we expect it every![]()
time,,the lower 48 get hammered by a winter storm,,we know that warm air i on its way,,,, How you doing today.....?
What windows? I thought that was a plain white, modern art canvas on a beige wall.Dag it is warmer in Alaska then OhioMy windows are covered in ice. But it looks like its going to get to you on Friday and then we will be back to normal again. How do you handle all the darkness, that would be a downer for me. I'd never get anything done. I'd be in bed by 4pm![]()
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