Okay. I feel like everyone asks this question… it’s the when to move the chicks outdoors question. But the temps are all on the cusp and I’m horribly indecisive and it’s stressing me out!! I need help deciding!
Here’s the deal. I have 7 chicks ages range 8 1/2 to almost 10 weeks. Standard size fowl (orps, Wyandottes, Legbar, etc…). Most appear fully feathered, by my judgement. We’ve been transitioning them outdoors, and they stayed out all last week. I have a brooder/heater in the coop, and it was maintaining 65 Fahrenheit overnight (50s outside). Daytime highs were 70s in the run, and I closed them up each evening before it cooled off. But alas, I’m in Maryland, and we’re presently being hit with wicked heavy rain and a drop in temps. I brought them inside due to the combo of wet & cold, but my brooder is not really equipped for them at this size anymore.
Tomorrow the rain stops, and temps this coming week will hit 60s & 70s but the overnights are still 40s. The challenge is that we aren’t home during the day. Hubs leaves the house last at 8 AM. Last week it was 50s at 8, so he’d open the coop. This week it’ll be 40s at 8. Once the door to the coop is open, the heater doesn’t really keep it warm anymore. So they’re going to spend several hours in 40s/50/low 60s until it warms up if we do the same thing as last week. I don’t get home until 4:30, so whatever we do at 8, they are stuck with until then. I think the coop will get too hot if we leave them locked inside for that length of time (even if we turn the heater off).
Pics of chicks & their coop included. The lavender orp & Legbar are the 2 youngest chicks.
If you were in my situation would you:
A- stop babying the chickens and leave them outside where they belong (slightly heated small coop & small run)
B- leave them in the coop all day without heat. If it gets 85+ degrees they’ll be fine.
C- figure out a way to finagle a more appropriately sized brooder/indoor space for them for one more week until overnight temps stop being stupid cold.
D- quit your full time job and follow your dream of being a stay at home chicken mom so you can monitor them at all times, spoil them, and make sure they stay in their ideal comfort zone.
E- none of the above
Here’s the deal. I have 7 chicks ages range 8 1/2 to almost 10 weeks. Standard size fowl (orps, Wyandottes, Legbar, etc…). Most appear fully feathered, by my judgement. We’ve been transitioning them outdoors, and they stayed out all last week. I have a brooder/heater in the coop, and it was maintaining 65 Fahrenheit overnight (50s outside). Daytime highs were 70s in the run, and I closed them up each evening before it cooled off. But alas, I’m in Maryland, and we’re presently being hit with wicked heavy rain and a drop in temps. I brought them inside due to the combo of wet & cold, but my brooder is not really equipped for them at this size anymore.
Tomorrow the rain stops, and temps this coming week will hit 60s & 70s but the overnights are still 40s. The challenge is that we aren’t home during the day. Hubs leaves the house last at 8 AM. Last week it was 50s at 8, so he’d open the coop. This week it’ll be 40s at 8. Once the door to the coop is open, the heater doesn’t really keep it warm anymore. So they’re going to spend several hours in 40s/50/low 60s until it warms up if we do the same thing as last week. I don’t get home until 4:30, so whatever we do at 8, they are stuck with until then. I think the coop will get too hot if we leave them locked inside for that length of time (even if we turn the heater off).
Pics of chicks & their coop included. The lavender orp & Legbar are the 2 youngest chicks.
If you were in my situation would you:
A- stop babying the chickens and leave them outside where they belong (slightly heated small coop & small run)
B- leave them in the coop all day without heat. If it gets 85+ degrees they’ll be fine.
C- figure out a way to finagle a more appropriately sized brooder/indoor space for them for one more week until overnight temps stop being stupid cold.
D- quit your full time job and follow your dream of being a stay at home chicken mom so you can monitor them at all times, spoil them, and make sure they stay in their ideal comfort zone.
E- none of the above
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