Chicks pecking each other's eyes. How can I prevent it?

Soot the silkie

Songster
5 Years
Sep 19, 2014
374
10
101
Humboldt, California
My new chicks have the bad habit of pecking each other's eyes. It's not so much an act of aggression as it is 'Ooh, look at that black shiny dot! It looks like FOOD! I must eat it.' Is there anyway I can stop them? Or should I just hope they don't peck too hard? I've heard that not using an infrared bulb can make them peck each other and be mean. But I'm using an infrared bulb and the chicks seem very calm other than the pecking. It's not really about pecking order either because the lowest one pecks the ruler and the middle one pecks the lower and so on and so forth. Anyway, can I stop them from blinding each other?
 
Switch to a ceramic heat emitter and use a blue light for light. After the first 3 days, give them 8 hours of dark each night.

Pet stores carry them but cheaper here.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/110V-150W-P...Reptile-Heater-Brooder-Light-US-/161139800976

They last longer and are more efficient. They can break but if they do they don't make the mess a lamp does.

ETA
Red hides blood and wounds but blue is calming to chickens.
 
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I had a RIR chick that did this. She went around to all the other chicks in the brooder and would peck at their eyes. It stopped after a day or two, and everyone was OK.

It may help to add some distractions to the brooder to give them something else to focus on, for example: 1) a dish of mashed hard-boiled eggs to give them something new to peck at, 2) a small dish of colored marbles to give them something else that's shiny to peck at, and/or 3) a couple of 3" diameter branches to give them something to perch on, sleep next to, navigate around, and provide semi-isolation areas.
 
I had a RIR chick that did this. She went around to all the other chicks in the brooder and would peck at their eyes. It stopped after a day or two, and everyone was OK.

It may help to add some distractions to the brooder to give them something else to focus on, for example: 1) a dish of mashed hard-boiled eggs to give them something new to peck at, 2) a small dish of colored marbles to give them something else that's shiny to peck at, and/or 3) a couple of 3" diameter branches to give them something to perch on, sleep next to, navigate around, and provide semi-isolation areas.

Ok!
 
Switch to a ceramic heat emitter and use a blue light for light. After the first 3 days, give them 8 hours of dark each night.

Pet stores carry them but cheaper here.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/110V-150W-P...Reptile-Heater-Brooder-Light-US-/161139800976

They last longer and are more efficient. They can break but if they do they don't make the mess a lamp does.
I don't really want to buy another heat source. Will they stop pecking each other on their own as they get older? I've never heard to use that kind of heat before so is there anything else I can do?
 
They probably will if they don't cause injury first. Having more space usually helps too.

Ceramic is all I've used for the last couple years. Otherwise you can't provide a dark period.
An Eco-glow brooder is a non-light method too but it's pricey.



 
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They probably will if they don't cause injury first. Having more space usually helps too.

Ceramic is all I've used for the last couple years. Otherwise you can't provide a dark period.
An Eco-glow brooder is a non-light method too but it's pricey.



Mine have a good amount of room there are only three of them anyway. They have about four square feet but they all follow each other around,
 
This is a ticklish issue. I've always cringed at the possibility of my chicks pecking each others eyes. Several have pecked ME in the eye, so I have reason to be afraid!

There's every reason to believe bright light, and especially if it's on 24/7, causes extra stress as well as magnifying the attraction of their black, shiny little eyes.

From the very first day, I stretch a dark shade cloth over the brooder at nightfall between the heat lamp and the chicks, to simulate night time. It relieves the stress caused by continual light bombardment, but it also establishes the rhythm of day and night, so important later for egg development.

It's easy to buy one or two yards of red or green cloth at a fabric shop at minimal cost. Just be careful the cloth doesn't come into contact with the heat lamp. Or, if you love to "re-purpose" stuff, drape an old bathrobe over the brooder, or an old bath towel!
 

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