Currently enjoying a Hendricks Gin and tonic with lime. Very tasty! Had a good day today.
You know, you're making me feel like a drunk the way you're always talking about all this alcohol... ;-) Just kidding. On the serious side, I've never had a gin and tonic, plus I'm very particular on my alcohols. This American p*ss-water we call beer just doesn't do it for me. I guess it goes back to the German and Irish in me...
Hey again guys. So I had a question about transitioning my ladies to the coop. They are now about 5 weeks old. And they've been spending their days in the coop (all day) for about the past 2 weeks. I noticed that they don't need their heat lamp in their brooder box at night anymore. When I brought them in last night and turned it on, Rosco started panting after a few minutes (and I had already moved the heat lamp as far away as possible). So I turned it off. That's when I discovered that they are afraid of the dark. They got so upset and were cheeping and cheeping. And then when I put a night light out there, they calmed down and went to bed.
So I read on another page here about chickens being afraid of the dark. And some people said they weaned them and just let them cry it out for a couple nights until they got used to it. A lot of other people said they just put a light in the coop. So this morning my husband and went and got and LED landscape light with a solar panel and photovoltaic cell so it would just come on at night. Then I mounted the light towards the top of the roosting area (pointing down). It got dark, and they weren't as clever as I hoped, they just huddled in the corner in the outside part of their coop crying. So I moved them up into the top. I even put some of their food and water up there so they wouldn't have to venture out into the scary dark. So this is kind of the setup....
Problem is, they still never really settled down. I thought maybe they were chilly, but they've been out in the coop in the mornings when it's colder than it is now and were totally fine. After a couple hours of them cheeping away and noticing that they never really settled down for the night, I brought them back into their brooder box with the night light.
Is this typical for when you are transitioning your chicks to the coop overnight? Have you guys had issues with this? Am I doing something wrong? I don't want them to be stressed and upset. But I don't want to coddle them too much either (which is my tendency with all animals). But my only thought is maybe they are just upset because they had never been left in their coop overnight and it was messing with their routine. Or maybe they were chilly. But I even put a little box out there with pine shavings and a couple of buried hand warmers to give them some heat. They weren't really interested. Boss Hogg stays on the roosting sticks, but Rosco always just sits on the floor, I don't know why she's not roosting because she likes roosting on stuff during the day. Ugh, I don't know. Anyway, what do you guys think?
I can't say that any of mine appeared to be afraid of the dark. I don't recall them ever crying at night. I can tell you they were awake and very active the first few nights in the coop, but settled down after a few hours. I've always been a firm believer in letting nature take it's course. Night lights and such don't belong in the coop. If you think about where they would live naturally, prior to their mass domestication of course, they didn't have any of that. When I first started reading, I was concerned about the cold and the heat, too, so I had looked into adding a fan for summer and a heater for winter. As it turns out, chickens are far more hearty than I ever imagined. They seem to thrive in the cold weather. During that short freeze we had in February, I think it was, I had the three new Black Coppers and they went out almost immediately during the day and after about a week they were in the coop with a heat lamp. Less than a week after that, I've kept the heat lamp off. They seem to be the best developing and happiest of the clan.
Now, I will admit that my coop situation is slightly different than most. Ok, it's different than every other one I've read about. It's situated on my back porch nestled into a corner. The back wall of the coop is directly in front of a large window, so they get any ambient light that is coming from the house. We're all usually in bed by 1900 Hours, though, so I can't imagine there would be that much light left over. When I realized how attached my wife had become, I figured she'd want to be able to see them whenever they were in there, so I designed it around that particular spot. With the exception of my full-grown hens, everyone else loves roosting on a piece of vertical 3/4" plywood that I placed "temporarily" to keep the bedding inside until I finished the outer panels. With that back wall being so wide and open, that's their favorite spot. I counted 8 of the 11 roosting across there this morning.

