NameIwish
Songster
- Jan 27, 2023
- 130
- 148
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OK, but, according to the OP, it is NOT 'working well.' All I am sharing is my personal experience with 'day old chick' mortality rates relative to environmental variables - primarily temperature."that size is very common. It works well"
If the OP gets a 15% mortality and (in the picture) the chicks are away from the heating element(s) maybe she got some sick chickees.
The OP didn't exactly detail the parameters - How old were the chicks when she got them? was the (Large INMHO) metal enclosure warmed up when the chicks were introduced? What were the temperatures in that enclosure ends, middle, base? Where was this enclosure housed? In conditioned space? What was the temperature range in the space it was kept in? How many hours before the first fatality? Were any adjustments made prior to the second, the third fatalities?
True the chicks are able to regulate their temperature somewhat. Also true that significant changes in temperature are beyond a chick's ability to compensate for. True they are better able to do so after 'feathering out' - which is how momma keeps them warm and toasty.
As I wrote somewhere in this thread, I would leave the little carrying containers Tractor Supply or Rural King provided for bringing the chicks home right in the brooder (after turning the little 'window' into a chickee-sized door. I figured they were as accustomed to that as anything else and it seemed to work out well. They have the room to roam to get a meal or a drink, can got out to set under the light or cuddle up inside their own little corner of the world for warmth and companionship.
That they, ever after weeks, prefer those small quarters (absent any encouragement from me) would seem to support my contention that, for raising itty-bitty birds bigger ain't necessarily better.