- Mar 4, 2014
- 131
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i am thinking no because my coop is not heated and the chicks will probably die wont they?
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Living in Minnesota, I tend to forget that some people get to be warm in the winter.Very true. I didn't think to mention the dependence on climate. Living in Texas, I tend to forget how frigid other areas of the country can get, and how early.
Congratulations on your little guy! I agree that the mama knows what to do, I just wonder about after she's decided to wean them and they're on their own. I honestly can't say I have experience with it since I don't let my broodies hatch this late for that very reason. It's just something to think about.I'm in Northern Wyoming and just had a chick hatch either late Tuesday nite or early Wednesday morning, I'm not sure which. He had a rough first day, but now he's out there running around with Mom and learning how to be a big chicken! A broody this late in the year is not the way I'd chosen to have done it, but since this was my little granddaughter's chicken and I'm a pushover where my grandkids are concerned, we ordered some hatching eggs. I'll never do shipped eggs again, but we are thrilled with this little guy. I've learned one valuable lesson - no matter what time of year, those ladies usually know exactly what to do
If it were me, I'd be collecting the eggs, too. We don't get quite that cold on a daily basis, but it does get there at some point in the winter, sometimes for a couple weeks at a time. I'm not looking forward to it, either.Yeah I am in manitoba canada, and it's already dipping below freezing here at night! So I have just been collecting the eggs now. Winters here are very cold, -25 is a normal winter day but it gets to -30 often. Ohhhhh man, that just reminds me of what's coming!