Hello BYC! I have some questions!
On the very experienced advice of members here, I decided to forgo my plans for a separate brooding coop for this years babies and opted to partition off some area inside the main coop for them to brood from the 2ish week mark on.
Here’s where my questions come in...
Our days are warm. Sunny and around 70. Although windy, the coop has no drafts and sits in sunlight all day, staying warm. The chicks moved up today and within 10 minutes were running around having a ball in their larger space.
On the downside, night temps are cold. Like, they drop to around 36* cold. I have a Ecoglow heat plate, but they didn’t show any interest in it at all. They had a heat lamp in their indoor brooder(due to some shipping AND quality control issues preventing timely delivery
) so they’re used to that.
This evening, I went to check on them and they were all sleeping together in a big happy mass. Not a suffocating pile, but very sweetly cuddled up. The problem was, it was nowhere near the heat source! Fearing the worst, I set up the heat lamp(quite securely), to make sure they would stay warm. With a 38-40* night tonight, I didn’t want them to freeze.
So, here’s my question: Is two-three weeks(varying hatch dates) of age too early for them to survive a night without a heat source, even if they’re cuddled up? At what point will their shared body heat be enough to sustain them in 40-50 degree nights? I will certainly see how this night goes and hopefully they all survive...
i have a red light lamp currently, but have a slightly lower wattage black ceramic bulb I will sub out tomorrow. These are used for reptiles and don’t put out lights
On the very experienced advice of members here, I decided to forgo my plans for a separate brooding coop for this years babies and opted to partition off some area inside the main coop for them to brood from the 2ish week mark on.
Here’s where my questions come in...
Our days are warm. Sunny and around 70. Although windy, the coop has no drafts and sits in sunlight all day, staying warm. The chicks moved up today and within 10 minutes were running around having a ball in their larger space.
On the downside, night temps are cold. Like, they drop to around 36* cold. I have a Ecoglow heat plate, but they didn’t show any interest in it at all. They had a heat lamp in their indoor brooder(due to some shipping AND quality control issues preventing timely delivery

This evening, I went to check on them and they were all sleeping together in a big happy mass. Not a suffocating pile, but very sweetly cuddled up. The problem was, it was nowhere near the heat source! Fearing the worst, I set up the heat lamp(quite securely), to make sure they would stay warm. With a 38-40* night tonight, I didn’t want them to freeze.
So, here’s my question: Is two-three weeks(varying hatch dates) of age too early for them to survive a night without a heat source, even if they’re cuddled up? At what point will their shared body heat be enough to sustain them in 40-50 degree nights? I will certainly see how this night goes and hopefully they all survive...
i have a red light lamp currently, but have a slightly lower wattage black ceramic bulb I will sub out tomorrow. These are used for reptiles and don’t put out lights