SBmember
In the Brooder
- Nov 11, 2016
- 32
- 6
- 24
Brand new to chicks. Our chicks came in the mail yesterday at 3 days old after a 2 1/2 day trip, we have a fairly large brooder 3x4 1/2 roughly. 3 feet tall. It is a wooden crate with a hardwire cover, a premier heat plate in a corner, water dish with rocks, small feed dish, twigs/branches and a small container of dirt to play in. We lost a baby chick sometime in the night. No pasty butt even though we had to clean up 2 others. She was already uncoordinated when she arrived, and the brooder was reading 70°. I have the heat plate set at two different levels, as an option (because we have bantams and regular size chicks) and each side is set at the height of eachs backs. The nights lately have been getting down to 50°. The brooder is in the house and we only have natural light as our source which may explain why the chicks weren't coming out this morning in 70°. But i was always told if they're hudled under the heat source then there isn't enough so im starting to get paranoid. We put up a 100watt light on the other end of the brooder and everyone started roaming and playing but I'm not sure if it was because of more light or the temperature going up with the light and the house warming up with the day. We turned it off when it hit 90° in the brooder since it is coninuing to warm up in the house. I'm having a hard time figuring out how to keep a constant temp with the light bulb as the day gets warmer. Should we just leave it as strictly the heat plate and that'll be sufficient? My main question is that, is the heat plate enough of a heat source or do we need to supplement or add? Would it be best to leave the plate to use when they feel chilly and leave the other end without a heat source so they can get out of the heat if needed?