- May 19, 2009
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They were brooded naturally, I think.Thanks Karen. I'm beginning to see why the ENglish breeds, like the sussex are hatched in the spring. Do you know if the chicks were brooded by the hens historically, or artifically?? My SS have never gone broody. For egg production I really like that; for chick production not so much.
There is a difference between the amount of light needed to increase egg production and the light needed to keep combs from freezing. The 7w LED does shed enough lumens to increase egg production, but being an LED, will not produce the heat needed for frostbite prevention. I know that birds raised in cages will grow a bigger comb. I trust the authors on that. I also suspect those cages didn't get the best light back then.
So I figured I needed three things. Light to enhance laying. Light to prevent frostbite without raising humidity. A set up to provide light 24/7 in the winter to accomplish all three of these things. I settled on a 65 watt GE floodlight ( not the Teflon-coated "Rugged" variety). I run it 24/7 in the 4d x 6w x 4h coop. I know this isn't how others, including many veterans, do it. But it is working for me 2 years now. The heat gathers near the low roof to keep the cock's comb from frostbite. The light isn't throwing enough heat to effect humidity and the light 24/7 hasn't effected the rate of lay negatively as some write when it is run 24/7 on the birds. I think one factor is I only keep 6 birds in this coop, giving them the 4 sq. ft. each when confined. No stress-induced problems, even when confined for weeks during fowl weather. They lay right thru blizzards and fowl weather.
Best,
Karen