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I know the premier heat plate is $$ but I hear it works great, uses much less electric than a heat lamp. Heat lamp bulbs can blow and lose chicks if it's cold unless you run two, more $$, and you have to replace bulbs occasionally anyway. Then there is the risk of fire with heat bulbs, no risk with the brooder plate I hear. A heatlamp keeps them up all night, plate doesn't.
I think a brooder plate would be a good investment, as long as they last years.
I agree @gjensen I only do chicks in the spring. I almost told SandHill I'd have to pass on my order when May turned to June. I didn't want even young chickens going into our winter. We've had many mild ones but the last couple were months of subzero, -25 with windchill. I was quite surprised my leghorns suffered no frostbite and even had a polish do good. The EEs, leghorns, welsummer and polish laid all winter with no supplemental light. I think it might have helped the fact they had just come into lay as the snow started flying.
I have to agree. I have only ever used lights, I have had them burn out on me, but that is the extent of any damage. BUT, I usually also brood them inside in a spare bedroom or bathroom, in a very large cardboard box.I shouldn't take exception with this post but here I am. We have used heat lamps for many decades and the only problem that has ever occurred is the occasional shot bulb. They do NOT explode or any such thing as that. As a safety precaution, we change out the older bulbs with new if a really cold front is coming through but I can honestly say, we've never had a fire, dead chick or any such thing due to the use of this heat source. Common sense is the key to any heating or cooling system.
The problem with growers through the cold winters of our northern half, is not the brooding. It is that period of time after the brooding is over.
There are a number of ways to brood chicks through the coldest days and nights. Eventually, they outgrow the brooders and need to be "set out on their own two feet". They are still growing though, and growing through the coldest months. That is a problem, and it is on two fronts.
There is a "natural" growing season. We can extend that season. That I will not argue. Do you want to though, and is the extra effort necessary?
"Naturally", the coldest days of winter are also the shortest days. The birds have a shorter day in which to consume their food. And for the first half, shorter and shorter days. The shrinking of daylight hours does have physiological effects on the birds. And if you do not think the length of day matters on a growing bird, run one batch under 16 hours of light, and another under twelve. @ 12 wks. there is a difference.
Then they are using more energy to stay warm. So they are devoting less and less feed to growing, and more and more into autonomic control of their core body temperature. If someone does not think that matters, leave one batch with a heat source after so many weeks, and put another out in the cold. One will pull away from the other in a dramatic fashion.
Never mind the positive effects of the warm clean sunshine, and the negative effects of the short dark days. It effects us to.
The conclusion is that we can, but the question is should we? We certainly can. We can manipulate their growing season, but I can grow enough birds out during the growing season. I do not need to grow any out during the dead of winter.
Without substantial manipulation, these bird rarely reach their potential.
Some of us have longer growing seasons than others. Tuscon, Arizona is different than New York. With minor manipulation, someone in Florida can grow birds and vegetables all year round. It might not be as practical for someone else.
I hatch just about every fall. I've had no problems with the growth if the chicks. I leave them under a heat lamp for 6 weeks just like all baby chicks. As they get older the lamp gets moved a little farther away from them. For the fall chicks I usually leave a light bulb on fir them all through the winter. They usually ( pullets) start laying late March to mid-April.