Large Scale Homemade Brooding

DellaMyDarling

Songster
Dec 13, 2017
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Mass Hilltowns
I've got a technical problem here!
I was thinking of ordering about 15 chicks each per 3 breeds of bird, so roughly 45 little chiclets at once.
I was going to buy larger plastic tote bins, make a cut out on the lid and apply chicken wire to that opening, then add the accessories needed. Three bins, one for each breed.
Sounded GREAT until I started reading about the length of time the chiclets require heat lamps. There's no way I'll fit 15 birds happily in even the largest totes I can buy after a few weeks of growth. I also happen to be buying larger sized birds, so...

Do I seriously upscale the number of brooder totes? How many totes are we really talking? Sounds...expensive. And a lot of space. Three totes already would have been crazy to fit in the house. I assumed they had to go in the house. Basement has mold issues, so I worried about their lungs down there. Front porch isn't insulated or heated, it'd be close to the temp outside. Our barn is not insulated or continuously heated, concrete floor makes downstairs colder than outside. Upstairs of barn is akin to our front porch.

This is the coop we will model our coop after:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/ar...icken-coop-plans-and-progress-pictures.47946/

This design should allow for a decent amount of "open space." Could I brood the chicks in this coop safely? Could that eliminate the need for tote brooders entirely?
What would you do to make this much larger area appropriate for all the chicks?
Floor covering? I plan to do linoleum or tile like the plan shows. Aspen shavings are accessible everywhere, but what do you know about using horse stall pellets?
 
Idk where you should brrod them but I'd skip the whole tote idea.
Totes are just easy bake brooders.
They're never big enough and the idea of setting up several does sound expensive.
I build 4'x 8' plywood boxes and use as brooders.
Even that size won't hold 45 chicks for more then about 3 weeks.
 
Batch one, brood in the coop. For subsequent batches, either build a separation area into your coop so you can brood them safely with the adults (optimal) or build an adjoining structure that can serve as a panic room to make integration easier if the coop design doesn't allow for a brooding area.

There is no reason whatsoever that chicks NEED to be in a human house and the amount of dust produced as that many of them grow feathers makes it a serious air quality issue for you.
 
That poster said a certain size would hold a certain number of chicks for 3 weeks. After that, I think the only issue is space: they need more room.

You can provide more space by increasing the brooder size, or removing some chicks (sell, give away, cull, put in another brooder, etc.), or moving them all out to the coop, or any other method that provides more space per chick. Whether they still need heat at 3 weeks will depend on what temperatures you have at the time, so keep that in mind when planning how to un-crowd them.

If you start with fewer chicks or a larger brooder, they won't run out of space as soon. By the time they are about 8 weeks old, you should provide the full amount of space that adult chickens would need. Giving them that much space sooner is fine too.
Yes, that's the plan. I just don't think I'll be able to do Fall/Winter chicks ever, because I have no electricity in my barn. I raised 10 chicks in a 2.5x5 but they are 4 weeks old = not big enough for cold nights in the barn/coop, but too big to spend all day in there now. It's been me putting them out there during the day, then putting them in a box and carrying them back to the garage/brooder for night/cold. *sigh*
 
Why not use cardboard boxes? As they grew I added more boxes tape them together and cute out openings so they could run back in forth between boxes. I got mine free from work or from stores. I covered the top with bird netting so they wouldn't jump out as they got older.
 
You can get really big moving boxes at home depot for a few bucks. Buy a few of them, line them with free "thrifty nickel" paper sheets. When your done, throw em away. Cost you 10-15 bucks or so and they are disposable.

Buy 3 of those large boxes and put them all in it.

Some people have much fancier methods of brooding, but keep in mind.
They didn't have all this fancy stuff 30 years ago as a kid growing up on a farm. Our chickens did just fine. They really didn't have all this 50 years ago.

My opinion. Put them in boxes, feed and water until they are old enough to survive in the coop. Until then watch them to make sure they are behaving. All this fancy technology, and complicated stuff is not required.

Your grandfather did it just fine without all of the expensive complicated gear.
 
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If you could make something like this would probably work. I have two next to each other now. One for a young hen an two chicks an the other for a rooster an hen. I need to keep them inside until sprispringi made these. You could call them a mini boxed coops or brooder boxes. Same idea if you will. But i had a broken door gate that i screwed on to it wo i can open an close it more easily. Just an idea. (Thats not a heat light btw just a light so they can see better since they are in my basement.) also if you made something like this placing a heat light in there will play a factor on a safe spot. I used a heating pad for my chicks but i only had 2 not 45 lol and they were kept in my living room. And i wouldnt do the tote idea with that many an with a heat light. An this might not be possible for that many chicks but they will be loud with peeps unless kept in an a barn garge ect but i found using the heating pad helped them sleep better at night and than used natural light during the day. But Good luck hope you figure something out! :)
 

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I had mine in totes and ended up splitting them in three, about five per tote, by three weeks old. Definitely need something bigger. I would think along the lines of something like you would use for a brooding box for a large dog with a lot of puppies. Then I would think about how to move them outside as soon as possible. You don’t say if you have other birds already, could you start them out in totes in your coop and give them more freedom as they get older?
 
watermelon box , maybe 2 inside the coop. Sometimes you can get these free at your local market. Call and ask them if they might save them for you.
 

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