Congrats to all of you with new chicks! Love the baby goats, also, especially the Nubian looking ones. Triplets are really a wonderful surprise!
I have an enclosed 16 x 20 building that I use as a farrowing barn. I cleaned it out, yesterday, after moving the pigs outdoors. It occurred to me that it might make a good space to brood chicks, until they get big enough to range outside.
There is already a heat lamp in there. I could add more. The floor is concrete. I was wondering if I could use that aluminum insulation, that someone mentioned on here, to enclose a small area? Put shavings right on top of the concrete. Would that be too cold for chicks? The sow would push all the straw aside to lay on the bare concrete, while her piglets huddled in the pile of straw under the light. I think she did this because the concrete was cold.
I could also move the large metal stock tank in there, as a brooder. What is the best base material for a brooder, under shavings? What should be avoided? Newspaper is too slippery, correct?
I've brooded chicks many times, but always started out in plastic tubs with paper towels. I'm trying to think larger scale now, something easy to clean.
I'm looking at this big empty space and considering options. Any ideas?
I'd do a stock tank with shavings for 2 weeks then covered concrete. Shavings or sand or whatever. If you are doing various ages you could use both. I would be worried about chicks getting chilled early on.
I used a fruit box with a heat lamp in the garage for when I had a ton of chicks for the first 4-6 weeks. There were more losses then you would have had inside. I think in the future I would do 2 heat sources.
Also you will want the food and water raised as soon as they know how to eat and drink. I just used bricks they could jump on them. Or you will be changing it constantly its insane what they can get in a waterer. That's why I like inside on rubber stuff change it every other day and they don't get it in the water.
not bad for only my second attempt 5 out of 7 hatched

