Friends of Sharks and dots

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I live in Ohio. I use the same set up in both the in house and coop brooders. My brooders are both three tier wood construction. The one in the basement has 1/4" plywood top, back, and sides. The forword facing doors are wire covered. Each level is about 48' wide and 24" deep by maybe 20" tall. Each pen has a regular 100 watt light bulb in a metal reflector suspended on a small chain so it is just slightly too warm directly under the light.

The coop brooder is larger and built right into the coop, the back and left sides are the actual coop walls. The right side and front (doors) are open wire covered wood frames. This brooder is about 8 ft long, each level has a removable center divider allowing up to 6 seperate pens. Each level has 2 100 watt bulbs in a reflector suspended on a small chain permantly mounted so the light can not get low enough to be a fire hazard. A opened eye screw is mounted so the light can be raised as the chicks age and need less heat by shortening the chain on this hook. But if a chick jumps up and knock the light of the hook, the chain is connected so it can't go lower than the length of the chain. If colder weather sets in you can open a paper feed bag or news paper and cover the wire sides to hold in more heat.

This is uses alot less electricity than heat lamps, plus less risk of fire.

The bottom tier sits directly on the the cement coop floor, after they have worked their way down to this level I can open the doors and let them have the entire run of that section of the coop but still go back under the light if they need to.

Normal years I hatch late April, May, June, it's just easier.
 
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I know what you mean with getting a new bator. First hatch we tried with the Hova bator we got before christmas, set 41 only 3 hatched, and 1 of those didn't make it. We had alot better hatch this time around. Set 42, 33 in lockdown, 25 hatched. Alot of the ones that didn't make it to lockdown were ours, we don't get out to check for eggs enough in this cold weather.

Cold weather is hard on the eggs. We were checking 3 to 4 times a day and still had frozen eggs.

This is when you can use the silkies as egg muffs!
 
Tab's chicken obsession :

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Sorry about your roo. We've had some die before where we saw a little off behavior the day before and then they're gone the next time you look in. Even had one we found dead in the morning and had seen no signs that something was wrong.
My morning started out after working all day and into the night with my mother walking into the house saying to the chicks "you stinky little chickens" and then to me with a look and inflection "Your chickens Stink!" We had a hatch last week and I have a couple totes with my older young stock in the house. I haven't been home much in 3 days because of dropping the girls to be babysat and work. My dear DH cleaned them before I got home last night. My mom doesn't agree with our having so many chickens and lets me know it when she can.

Gosh, I never realized that chickens stink!!!
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I live in Ohio. I use the same set up in both the in house and coop brooders. My brooders are both three tier wood construction. The one in the basement has 1/4" plywood top, back, and sides. The forword facing doors are wire covered. Each level is about 48' wide and 24" deep by maybe 20" tall. Each pen has a regular 100 watt light bulb in a metal reflector suspended on a small chain so it is just slightly too warm directly under the light.

The coop brooder is larger and built right into the coop, the back and left sides are the actual coop walls. The right side and front (doors) are open wire covered wood frames. This brooder is about 8 ft long, each level has a removable center divider allowing up to 6 seperate pens. Each level has 2 100 watt bulbs in a reflector suspended on a small chain permantly mounted so the light can not get low enough to be a fire hazard. A opened eye screw is mounted so the light can be raised as the chicks age and need less heat by shortening the chain on this hook. But if a chick jumps up and knock the light of the hook, the chain is connected so it can't go lower than the length of the chain. If colder weather sets in you can open a paper feed bag or news paper and cover the wire sides to hold in more heat.

This is uses alot less electricity than heat lamps, plus less risk of fire.

The bottom tier sits directly on the the cement coop floor, after they have worked their way down to this level I can open the doors and let them have the entire run of that section of the coop but still go back under the light if they need to.

Normal years I hatch late April, May, June, it's just easier.

Big M, can you post some pics of your set-up. I think I get the idea, but I am a visual person and understand better if I can see it.
 
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I live in Ohio. I use the same set up in both the in house and coop brooders. My brooders are both three tier wood construction. The one in the basement has 1/4" plywood top, back, and sides. The forword facing doors are wire covered. Each level is about 48' wide and 24" deep by maybe 20" tall. Each pen has a regular 100 watt light bulb in a metal reflector suspended on a small chain so it is just slightly too warm directly under the light.

The coop brooder is larger and built right into the coop, the back and left sides are the actual coop walls. The right side and front (doors) are open wire covered wood frames. This brooder is about 8 ft long, each level has a removable center divider allowing up to 6 seperate pens. Each level has 2 100 watt bulbs in a reflector suspended on a small chain permantly mounted so the light can not get low enough to be a fire hazard. A opened eye screw is mounted so the light can be raised as the chicks age and need less heat by shortening the chain on this hook. But if a chick jumps up and knock the light of the hook, the chain is connected so it can't go lower than the length of the chain. If colder weather sets in you can open a paper feed bag or news paper and cover the wire sides to hold in more heat.

This is uses alot less electricity than heat lamps, plus less risk of fire.

The bottom tier sits directly on the the cement coop floor, after they have worked their way down to this level I can open the doors and let them have the entire run of that section of the coop but still go back under the light if they need to.

Normal years I hatch late April, May, June, it's just easier.

Big M, can you post some pics of your set-up. I think I get the idea, but I am a visual person and understand better if I can see it.

This is the one in the basement.
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Pretty impressive, you still move pretty good with rebuilt running gear and all. Just out of curiousity how well would he mind with out the treats.
 
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Pretty impressive, you still move pretty good with rebuilt running gear and all. Just out of curiousity how well would he mind with out the treats.

He minds pretty well without treats. I mean I show and you can't have treats in the ring, obviously, and he does show well. He is very soft and I try to be very motivational training him, so treats, toys, praise and very few corrections. I try to make it all fun fun fun for him so he just associates the activities with good things.

When Maggie and Bill start playing together there can be a marked decline in minding. Separately they mind pretty well.

eta Maggie can mind noticeably less well upon occasion
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