What are their options?I plugged in the heat plate 1.5 days ago, and 5/10 chicks now prefer it. I didn't know how high to set it, so I raised it higher in the front than the back so they could decide where it's comfortable.
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What are their options?I plugged in the heat plate 1.5 days ago, and 5/10 chicks now prefer it. I didn't know how high to set it, so I raised it higher in the front than the back so they could decide where it's comfortable.
Quote: The option is a heat lamp at the other end of the brooder.
Gotcha....so they've split it 50/50.....I guess that's better than all going for the lamp!The option is a heat lamp at the other end of the brooder.
I have the larger heat plate that says it will warm 50-55 chicks so I am not planning on putting a heat lamp in the brooder with them. I have really held back on hatching as much as I could because of my fear of fire from heat lamps so I thought the heat plate would be a perfect alternative to the much more dangerous heat lamp.
I have a hen that hatched out a chick during our coldest spell and she has the chick out and about in the cold from dusk to dawn. The chick does run under the mom when it needs to get warm but then is soon back out running around again. I think I have over thought the need for constant heat when it comes to chicks and this year I am switching gears to let the chicks decide how much and when they need heat.
Yes it is heated to 10 Celsius or 50F. Not too hard to do, since the entire room (and the doors themselves) are insulated. The heater doesn't kick on too much. It is a forced air wall heater. The fire marshall recommended that over anything else.Aoxa....is the brooder room in your barn heated? What is the ambient temp in that room?