First Night in Coop! Sad Chicks!

I’m not going out again lol. It’s not easy. They were in the Florida room so I could see them all the time. It’s a real big difference!
I never started mine in the house. The brooder was in the garage but I was able to walk right out the garage door and check on them. I am glad they are in the coop, I just have major predator fear.
 
I was thinking night before last how much I need some cameras in the coop and run... I just put some chicks out, too, in the isolation/integration pen. Three days old! They have heat, it's warm out - the heat goes off during the day, it's so warm, and they get a bottle of ice in there instead. Suffice to say I was nervous as a cat with twenty kittens night before last. The chicks couldn't care less. I get up at 2 a.m. (there's a light, so I can see them quickly... only in the pen, not the main coop) they're running around, playing, eating and drinking, not even using the heat pad! I was expecting some distress, like with the OP's chicks... nope. They love it, they're happier, they're healthy and fascinated by watching the bigger chicks. They saw one of the EE pullets eating a weed, and immediately there were eight little beaks trying to get through the hardware cloth to the same kind of weed just outside the pen.
 
I was thinking night before last how much I need some cameras in the coop and run... I just put some chicks out, too, in the isolation/integration pen. Three days old! They have heat, it's warm out - the heat goes off during the day, it's so warm, and they get a bottle of ice in there instead. Suffice to say I was nervous as a cat with twenty kittens night before last. The chicks couldn't care less. I get up at 2 a.m. (there's a light, so I can see them quickly... only in the pen, not the main coop) they're running around, playing, eating and drinking, not even using the heat pad! I was expecting some distress, like with the OP's chicks... nope. They love it, they're happier, they're healthy and fascinated by watching the bigger chicks. They saw one of the EE pullets eating a weed, and immediately there were eight little beaks trying to get through the hardware cloth to the same kind of weed just outside the pen.
I wonder if it has something to do with how many chicks are together? The more, the merrier because they feel secure? The only time I've had just a handful of chicks, they've been under a broody, so it is very different. When I hatch in the incubator and am introducing them to the flock, there are at least a dozen, they go into the smaller coop when the temps permit, and they have parallel play time for several weeks before they get any interaction at all.
 
I wonder if it has something to do with how many chicks are together? The more, the merrier because they feel secure? The only time I've had just a handful of chicks, they've been under a broody, so it is very different. When I hatch in the incubator and am introducing them to the flock, there are at least a dozen, they go into the smaller coop when the temps permit, and they have parallel play time for several weeks before they get any interaction at all.

That could be. I figured, in my case, that they were still so young they hadn't really imprinted on the brooder as 'home'. I'm pretty new to chickens, still, but I know with some wild herd animals a female will go off, give birth, and bring the offspring back at about three days old - when it's up and walking, moving well enough to keep up and get out of the way of trouble. Purely speculation, on my part!
 
:hugs You are not alone! My first broody (no rooster, so fertile eggs) led to a wifi camera in the coop, then another one pointed at the opposite wall, then 1 outside in the run! It sounds eggcessive, but it has come in handy! :lau Our coop is about 150' from the house so we need to use a wifi extender! :gig

Those cameras are the best reality tv. :pop


That's fabulous! Now I know what to ask for for Christmas!!! At least two for each coop, a couple/three for the run, one for outside the coop/run .... Yes, absolutely the best TV around. :jumpy:clap Oh- one for the goat house too!!
 
That's fabulous! Now I know what to ask for for Christmas!!! At least two for each coop, a couple/three for the run, one for outside the coop/run .... Yes, absolutely the best TV around. :jumpy:clap Oh- one for the goat house too!!

Was joking with someone online during my 'chickwatch' night about needing cameras, and she got all excited. SHE wants to watch chick-cam, too! She started coming up with a whole plan for me to install cameras, post them to... some site where people pay to watch... livestreaming fluffy butts 24-7. That sounded like way, way too much work, when I just want to be sure they're okay!
 
Was joking with someone online during my 'chickwatch' night about needing cameras, and she got all excited. SHE wants to watch chick-cam, too! She started coming up with a whole plan for me to install cameras, post them to... some site where people pay to watch... livestreaming fluffy butts 24-7. That sounded like way, way too much work, when I just want to be sure they're okay!

Oh yeah -- like what they do at some humane society websites- they have those remotely operated toys you can activate online and "play" with a kitten from however many states away-- and of course watch them frolic. =) Tehehe Yes- I would keep it closed circuit myself- that is an idea for somebody though!
 
They'll be fine. They look nice and feathered, so won't get cold at night. I'm assuming it's pretty warm in summer in Central Florida as well, so that's of no concern.

They're unlikely to be sad...it's just a bit of a change. It's more likely that their humans are sad to see them outside! :)

Chickens huddle up together, so that's completely normal behaviour. Not sure about the shivering.

They figure out the coop pretty quickly. If you have to put them in at night for a week that's OK. They'll end up seeing it as their safe place. If you do put them in there manually, put them straight up on the roosts so they don't get into the habit of sleeping on the ground in there.
They stayed on the roost for only a minute then jumped off. They had roosts in the brooder they loved but these are wider. I’m thinking it’s just so new maybe in a day or two they will get on them. Right now they’re all piled up together on the pine shavings.
 

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