Mama Heating Pad in the Brooder (Picture Heavy) - UPDATE

Good morning! I posted a couple of weeks ago about our broody hatch, and how I wasn't worried about the babies outside with mama thanks to using this method to raise my first chicks. Well...things have been going really well, until now (maybe). The babies are 2 1/2 weeks old, they have LOTS of feathers, mom runs them around with all the big girls, and everyone is happy. But yesterday, she started to act like she was bothered by them. Today, she really doesn't seem to be concerned about the fact that it is 30°, lots of wind, and they are shivering. She has been leaving them behind, and they are CHEEPING really loudly. I spent a little time with them huddled on my lap, in my jacket. It seems very unsafe, especially for their little feet. I'm wondering if I should try to set up a heating pad out there for them in case she is done with them? She has been SO great, but I'm worried that if she abandons them, they'll die
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Thoughts?
Agrees set up the MHP for them as Bruce suggests.
Bummer you got a negligent broody......but you got it covered(with a warm heating pad).
Will be interesting to hear how broody behaves from here on out.
 
I love this setup... I don't think I will ever go back to raising chicks in the garage with a heat lamp:) My chicks are just 12 weeks old and are mostly roosting in the nest boxes now, so I will soon take the heating pad out. It's down to the '1' setting anyway. My question is, how soon do people take out the 'escape hatch' for the chicks to get away from older birds? Mine go outside and are around the older birds although they don't interact. I did have one that I think was killed by one of the older ones (found it dead, one puncture wound at the base of the neck, nothing else), but no problems since. If they are roosting up off the floor, are they ok without their private area?
 
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Hello. I love the MHP setup for babies but would it work for silkies out in a normal coop? I have two isolation cages in my coop, I was thinking about how I'll keep silkies warm next winter (just ordered them for spring) without having to make too many adjustments. I'm thinking of just using a MHP in an isolation area with the door closed mostly so only bantams can get thru. Then they can either roost on top or we can make it high enough for them to get under. Any opinions or experiences?
 
Hello. I love the MHP setup for babies but would it work for silkies out in a normal coop? I have two isolation cages in my coop, I was thinking about how I'll keep silkies warm next winter (just ordered them for spring) without having to make too many adjustments. I'm thinking of just using a MHP in an isolation area with the door closed mostly so only bantams can get thru. Then they can either roost on top or we can make it high enough for them to get under. Any opinions or experiences?
Would probably work, but still have the power outage causing shock risk of heating in winter......plus you probably don't need heat for silkies.
@oldhenlikesdogs has silkies in harsh climate(Wis or Minn?) with no heat.
 
Would probably work, but still have the power outage causing shock risk of heating in winter......plus you probably don't need heat for silkies.
@oldhenlikesdogs
 has silkies in harsh climate(Wis or Minn?) with no heat.


True. I forget about power outages lol. I feel like they'd be ok with us making one of the isolation cages their little retreat with extra straw. I was just worried... one of my friends told me he keeps them in a separate coop with a lamp on all winter and I did not want to go that route.
 
Hello. I love the MHP setup for babies but would it work for silkies out in a normal coop? I have two isolation cages in my coop, I was thinking about how I'll keep silkies warm next winter (just ordered them for spring) without having to make too many adjustments. I'm thinking of just using a MHP in an isolation area with the door closed mostly so only bantams can get thru. Then they can either roost on top or we can make it high enough for them to get under. Any opinions or experiences?

Please allow me to make a suggestion. If you don't want to be dependent on electricity, how about a cardboard huddle box lined with "space blanket" material? It would reflect back Silkies' body heat to them as they huddle in the box. The whole point really isn't to heat the chicken but to prevent the chicken from losing precious body heat. You would need to glue the fragile material down real well so busy beaks can't rip it up.

You would need to teach the chickens to use the box, but that shouldn't be hard if you toss some meal worms inside.
 

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