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And it is blazing. When we had those minus temps here in Pa this last winter, I must admit, I winped out and put a lamp out in the coop and pointed it over their heads, trying to keep it out of their eyes and away from the grass clippings I have as bedding. Well from the house, that lamp looked like something the airport would use to land planes! Ridiculous!
problems/challenges would be having a loose cover/area that chickens can get trapped in... having to raise the MHP as the chicks grow so they fit...have to adjust the hp controller (instead of raising the lamp) to reduce heat.Hello! I'm a new convert to the MHP brooding! I have some questions regarding construction, but will find it within the past posts I'm sure.
I do however have a question I am not sure I will easily find the answer to (I tried the search feature and it didn't find any good results).
Here it is - What sort of problems/complications have been experienced using the MHP method? Any problems/challenges specific to this method? Anyone have problems with over heating/under heating?
Oops...I guess I have one more question...How warm is the air temp of the room/coop you have your brooder in? My brooder will be in a large cool area (shop) heated with oil heaters just to keep things warm enough so pipes don't freeze (I will try to get an accurate temp at some point today). I am wondering if I may have to add more heat to the room. We have been over freezing most nights now.
Thanks a ton! I am really enjoying this thread!!!
Hello! I'm a new convert to the MHP brooding! I have some questions regarding construction, but will find it within the past posts I'm sure.
I do however have a question I am not sure I will easily find the answer to (I tried the search feature and it didn't find any good results).
Here it is - What sort of problems/complications have been experienced using the MHP method? Any problems/challenges specific to this method? Anyone have problems with over heating/under heating?
Oops...I guess I have one more question...How warm is the air temp of the room/coop you have your brooder in? My brooder will be in a large cool area (shop) heated with oil heaters just to keep things warm enough so pipes don't freeze (I will try to get an accurate temp at some point today). I am wondering if I may have to add more heat to the room. We have been over freezing most nights now.
Thanks a ton! I am really enjoying this thread!!!
You're awesome! Thanks for such a thorough answer! I will digest the info and plan accordingly! :-D **What are those little grey circular things in there next to the food container?**I'll answer your last question first with this link:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/yes-you-certainly-can-brood-chicks-outdoors
I brood my chicks outdoors in the run. Temperatures were in the teens and twenties, with a howling blizzard (60+ mph winds, sideways blowing snow, and a power outage to boot!) We had Scout, a single chick, out in his cave with the pad and it was 4 below zero! In this video he was around 4 weeks old, but knew his way around the Bigs, the coop, the waterer, and the cave. It wasn't his first day out there, either. Complications? Chicken math. This makes it so easy that your first batch of MPH raised chicks are feathered, independent, confident and ready to be on their own in about 4 weeks. Yeah, before the new has worn off, and you find yourself needing to replenish that! Um, space. MHP does take up more room in the brooder than hanging a light over them. Add the food and water, maybe a clump of sod for them to play on, and your brooder is almost too small before the chicks get here. Let's see.....power outages. You have to remember to turn that puppy back on and reset the "stay on" feature because unlike a heat lamp it won't come back on as soon as the power does. The night we lost power (and we don't know for how long) we woke in a panic! That was the night of the blizzard. Ran out there, got the pad turned back on and reset, and the chicks underneath were more upset by the flashlight in there! They were fine - one week old, no heat, and they were just cozy. The straw in, around, and on top of the cave plus their little bodies retained enough warmth that they didn't even notice. Brooding in the house is a different animal in some ways. You don't the pad on real high. Most folks find that 4, bumping to 5 if they have to, is just great. When I had mine indoors, @azygous asked me what the temp was under there. Since I don't rely on thermometers but on the chicks, I put one under there to find out. It was 69 degrees in the room. It was 82.5 under the cave and they were just fine...had been for a few days. But those chicks soon went outside to 30 degrees. Bump the pad up a notch because of the more fluctuating temps, and no issues at all. How'd I do?