Blooie, lifting Kendra, Jen and the rest of your family up to the throne room.
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I don't think I'd use the mylar blanket. Some have but with varying results but it seems to me it takes more fiddling. That said, @azygous may come by and beat me over the head with a heating pad.I brought home 6 chicks (meaties) last night, it was an unexpected arrival, but good practice before we have 40 coming next week. A local chicken mama works at a hatchery and these guys accidentally missed shipment and were supposed to be culled, instead she brought them to my house
Last night I just threw MHP together hap hazard. I put the hp on the underside of my wire frame with a bungee but it didn't seem very secure because my bungees were a bit too loose. I also didn't like that they could expose the wire frame on top when the towel shifts around.
So tis morning I set it up properly, I wrapped the hp with a one of those silver mylar blankets and attached it to the top of the wire frame. I also attached a towel on top and bottom so they'd have something soft on their backs.
Here's the question... they seem to prefer the top to the underneath and when I stick my hand in there it feels warmer on top too. I assume it's because on top they are right against the HP and underneath they are separated by the wire frame. I'm planning on moving them outside tomorrow (don't worry they aren't getting any artificial light inside) and I want to make sure they can get warm enough.
Do people normally put the hp on the top or the underside of the wire frame?
I suppose if I put the HP on the underside of the frame I can just put a piece of cardboard on top of the frame to keep the chicks legs from falling through the wire frame. I just thought I saw most pictures with the pad on top of the frame. *I also worry about the pad sagging in the middle over time if is underneath since there is just one bungee on each end.
Also, is it correct to wrap the mylar blanket around the MHP, or is that trapping the heat inside the blanket? I didn't quite understand how that was supposed to work.
***I DO have pictures, but I need to get them from my phone.
I still think it might be too high in the center. You want a cave rather than an igloo. With it domed like that it's not like a broody hen, where the heat is right down on them. I'm almost afraid they might pile up too tightly along the sides and the ones underneath the pile could suffocate. Extreme possibility, I know, but the shape of the frames we use has a reason. Also in a few more days they'll want to get up on top, and they aren't likely to do that with it that curved.I have the heating pad gowing down the sides so chicks can cuddle up to it. Wont that work even though the center it taller, like an igloo? I have aux heat nearby and checked temp a minute ago. Its 80 degrees inside and all week old chicks are inside. Will they be okay?
Sure, azygous. It's a Sunbeam X-Press Heat, 12"x15". It will say right on the box that you can turn off the auto-off feature. While the auto-shut off seems silly, daughter says it serves a very good function - if an elderly or otherwise less mobile person lays on the heating pad for too long, they can burn their skin. So it helps prevent that but turning itself off. The problem is trying to find one that doesn't have that feature anymore! I like being able to bypass it for my purposes.
I went out and checked on the Littles. Got the pee-waddin' scared out of me. As I approached the run, I heard the Bigs but no peeping! I ripped open the door and didn't see a single chick running around in their enclosure. There was no sound at all coming from the cave. With my heart down around my knees, I opened their door, crouched and put my hand under the heating. 15 very warm and very startled chicks scurried out like cockroaches when the light comes on! They survived a night that got down to 23 degrees and did just great.e