This winter will be my 4th year raising chicks, my second year hatching chicks. When I first stared I had my brooder box in my study on the main floor of my house. Loved watching chick TV and basically got nothing done except watching chicks. It was great but the mess, the dust, the smell etc was not so great. I also kept my chicks inside for way too long. So by the third time I raised chicks I moved the huge brooder box to the basement. There was good and bad with this method. The good was less mess and still being able to see them often, although not as pleasant experience because my basement in winter is quite chilly. The bad was there was still dust and smell but now it was all over the junk in my basement. I moved these basement chicks outside way way earlier. Put them in a separate coop with a chick heat plate and they did fine. Also my coop is raised so when I went to visit them they could see my whole body and were less frightened of me. I wasn't just some disembodied hands reaching down from the sky to scoop them up. They turned out friendly and unafraid. They also have a window with hardware cloth that they could see, hear and smell my other chickens (my coops are back to back with a window dividing them.
So on to my question...I have been reading a bit about people brooding their chicks outside from the very beginning. Im considering doing this. I have identical side by side coops that have a door in between that can be opened or closed. Has anyone brooded their chickie babies from the very beginning outside even in the winter? I live in MA and it can often be in the teens overnight. I would start them in the coop with no run access with a heating plate and obviously food and water access. The coop is 8x4 and raised to about waist height. Has anyone done this sucessfully? My runs are also side by side and when I did move my chicks outside last year once they were more feathered out they had access to their own run but they could clearly see the other chickens. After a while I free ranged them together and then finally I just opened the door between the run and they integrated without too many issues. So I like the idea of starting the chicks outside from the get go for a couple of reasons.
1. Less mess
2. Chicks seem less afraid of me by seeing me as a person and not just hands coming from the sky to scoop me up
3. They feather out faster being in the cold
4. They boost their immunity being in an environment that isnt so sterile.
5 They integrate easier because they are used to the sounds, smell and look of other chickens. They can watch and learn from the other chickens.
Does anyone have anything to add that maybe I overlooked?
Has anyone done this successfully in New England? or other cold climate?
Also I plan on hatching maybe Anconas, Hedemoras, Swedish Flowers and maybe cream legbars and marans.
If you made it all the way through this long winded post thank you and I appreciate any feedback you experts can offer
So on to my question...I have been reading a bit about people brooding their chicks outside from the very beginning. Im considering doing this. I have identical side by side coops that have a door in between that can be opened or closed. Has anyone brooded their chickie babies from the very beginning outside even in the winter? I live in MA and it can often be in the teens overnight. I would start them in the coop with no run access with a heating plate and obviously food and water access. The coop is 8x4 and raised to about waist height. Has anyone done this sucessfully? My runs are also side by side and when I did move my chicks outside last year once they were more feathered out they had access to their own run but they could clearly see the other chickens. After a while I free ranged them together and then finally I just opened the door between the run and they integrated without too many issues. So I like the idea of starting the chicks outside from the get go for a couple of reasons.
1. Less mess
2. Chicks seem less afraid of me by seeing me as a person and not just hands coming from the sky to scoop me up
3. They feather out faster being in the cold
4. They boost their immunity being in an environment that isnt so sterile.
5 They integrate easier because they are used to the sounds, smell and look of other chickens. They can watch and learn from the other chickens.
Does anyone have anything to add that maybe I overlooked?
Has anyone done this successfully in New England? or other cold climate?
Also I plan on hatching maybe Anconas, Hedemoras, Swedish Flowers and maybe cream legbars and marans.
If you made it all the way through this long winded post thank you and I appreciate any feedback you experts can offer
