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- #11
I love this idea! (And that of the margaritas!!).And these responses are the reason that after my first batch almost 8 years ago I never raised another chick indoors under a heat lamp again. Ever. Mine go outside to a wire brooder pen in the run, among the adults and separated by just the wire, from the start. I use Mama Heating Pad as their surrogate mommy hen - just a heating pad draped over a wire frame, covered with a threadbare towel wrapped in Press ‘n’ Seal. I bend the arch of the frame up slightly to form a sort of shallow cave under it, and they love it. They duck under for a quick warm-up, or as the sun goes down for the night, or if they get spooked. The rest of the time they’re exploring and learning to be chickens.
By 2 weeks the frame is raised a bit and the temperature of the pad turned down. By 3 weeks they spend hardly any time using it at all and it’s only on the lowest temperature setting on some nights. By 4 weeks it’s turned off and the brooder pen is removed completely. Every batch every year, every time. It never ceases to amaze me just how little heat chicks actually require!
I should add that we don’t live in a balmy climate. We’re in Northwestern Wyoming where our springtime “chick season” temperatures are still in the 20s, dipping into the teens, with sideways blowing snow. We can see snowfall into June, and have many times.
If it was me, I’d go with Option A, without the heat, except I’d have done it weeks ago.But I fully realize that my personal comfort zone and yours are not the same, and that’s okay. When I first started doing it the “natural” way and posting about it, people here thought I was crazy.…a crackpot….a mad scientist bent on killing innocent lititle chicks in some sick, bizarre experiment. Your chicks are 8-10 weeks old. That means they are halfway to the point of laying eggs. I think they are capable of handling living outside.
BTW, prepare yourself for a few first class royal chickie temper tantrums. They don’t like change, and after weeks and weeks of a specific environment, they are going to be totally p..pis…..mad about this change. It’s a whopper! New sights, sounds, scary shadows, and <gasp> night! Evil, scary darkness! Lions and tigers and bears, oh my! Oops, sorry….wrong scenario. Anyway, they’re preprogrammed to go to sleep when the sun sets and wake up when it rises. We mess that up. We mean well, but we mess it up. When faced with it for the first few times, they’re gonna hate you! But they’ll get over it, I promise. Your job is to make sure they are locked in their coop (safely away from those lions and tigers and bears) and adjusting. So pour yourself a cup or glass of whatever will calm your nerves (and maybe harden your heart a bit), pull the covers over your head, and persevere. This is why, when people ask for first aid kit recommendations, my first suggestion is Margarita mix. Sooner or later in this chicken raising journey, we’re gonna need it!
Put them out. You've got this….I have total faith in you!
I’d love to try something like this next year. Every year it’s a challenge to get the Bigs and littles used to one another because of the temp change from heating lamp to outdoors.
I have 2 questions for you about your set up-
1. What heating pad do you use?
2. Do you keep the brooder in the run? Or is it in the coop?