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A couple more chicks hatched a few days ago, and I decided to take them out and put in the corner jars recommended by cmom, as well as
a Sunbeam hygrometer from Walmart that cost under $4 (its back with the humidifiers).
That made 6 chicks in the rabbit cage, and, by keeping 3 containers of water with little hand cloths in them full as well as the troughs in the bottom full (it was really too late to lift up the wire grid and put a towel under it) the humidity is near 60%.
I seem to need to tweak the temperature more with this arrangement. Also, it takes a while for the thermometer to get a good reading, and while it is in the hole, it blocks half the circulation (at least of the big holes). So I started leaving the thermometers out. I should probably get a thermometer that I can leave inside and read through the window, the way I do the hygrometer. The problem is the medical thermometers give the maximum reading over a time span, and that would mean opening the incubator for every reading. I need a cheap thermometer that has high accuracy and doesn't need "resetting". Too bad Sunbeam doesn't make a thermometer to go with their hygrometer.
Then this morning, there were all of a sudden 6 chicks in there, with more cracking their eggs!
Are you in a southern climate?? What do you do with hatched chicks if you are northern? Keep them IN till spring arrives.
I really really jumped the gun I think starting eggs in Dec cause I won't get a hatch till Janueary. Never having done this before at ALL in my life I'm trying to figger where I can set up a brooder and keep it protected in a house with 5 terriers and 3 cats, and then once the babies are featherd, they'll probably still have to be protected because Im in mid-Michigan and wibnter has only just begun.
I live in Iowa too...my chicks stay inside in a cardboard box for about the first week...then they get booted to the garage...in a large plasic kiddie pool with heat lamps...where they stay until they are fully feathered...then they are booted to the young chicken house (outside, off heat lamps). I only keep them inside the first week so I can keep an eye out for pasty butts, illness...etc. It's a lot easier to check on them several times a day if they are in my laundry room! I don't think I could handle keeping the babes in the house all winter!! I do have an insulated area of my garage...and I'm debating about picking up an electric space heater for the dead of winter...but we'll see how it goes!!!