I left my 9 3-4 week old chicks outside in their coop without a heat lamp for the first time last night. It was 65 degrees. They were completely fine. I went out and checked on them once and some of them were even bedded down alone and not cuddled. These chicks are tougher than we think.
Yep!! They just don’t need or want as much heat as people have been trained to think they do! Right now in Wyoming it’s been snowing, temps in the 30s, high wind warnings, and I have chicks outside in the coop with no heat lamp. You read that right! I have 3 that are now 2.5 weeks old, 7 that are just over a week old, and 4 that we just got yesterday at 3 days old. For years now we have used Mama Heating Pad out there, and they absolutely thrive!
Chowing down, and one getting some grit from their dust bath pan.
All of the chicks are snuggled down under Mama Heating Pad, and the last one is heading in to join them. Notice the other little one peeking out….just exactly as they do under a broody hen. They duck under for a quick warmup, if they get spooked, or when the sun starts going down. But they spend most of their time out exploring and learning to be chickens.
Temperature in the coop right now is 30 degrees. Temperature on the floor under Mama Heating Pad is 83. They should all be frozen dead, right? They should be starving to death because the coop is 100% dark at night so they aren’t eating all night long, right?
If a two pound hen can successfully raise her broods of chicks outdoors among the flock regardless of weather, without books, charts, heat lamps, nightlights, experts, and web sites, why do we do it so differently and think we’re doing it better? This system mimics her as closely as possible, and I can tell you firsthand that those 95 degrees the first week, 90 the second, etc. recommendations are (in my opinion) nuts. By 2 weeks the chicks are spending very little time under the pad and the pad is turned down a notch, at the end of that 2 weeks they are spending more time on top of and around MHP. by three weeks they’ve mostly weaned themselves off heat, and by 4 weeks they have taken themselves off all heat completely and no longer use their brooder pen. They know far better what they need than we do, and they do much better if they get to self-regulate!
