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

@aart your weather sounds about like ours in Colorado as far as temps go. What is your elevation where you are? We are being hit by a storm now, just came in with some colder air and rain expected.
686'...lol. Probably very different, I live 15 miles east of Lake Michigan, that effects our weather a great deal.
Was mid 70's Sunday but dry and breezy, got up to 80+ and muggy yesterday....YUK!
Forecast sez: much cooler for the next 10 days...Yay!
 
400


We are on test run mode. Our 3 chicks arrive Fri/Sat. This is on setting 2. It will come up to 95 at the center. We are in south Fl. My frame is 2" at the back and graduates to 4" at the front. At setting 2, temps range from 98 to 93 under the hen. I can't find a,happy medium. I'm going to try a lighter weight towel on top. The crate is lined with a puppy pad on the bottom, then shavings, then paper towels. I'm figuring on removing the paper towels after a few days. If anyone can offer suggestions on how to get this more accurate that would be great. They're in the warmest room in the house. AC is off in that room. Room temps vary from 86 (late afternoon down to 76 in the morning. I'm really nervous.
 
You're stressing needlessly over a temperature reading. The chicks don't care if the pad is five degrees this way or five the other way. Most of us shoot for a temp reading (if we bother with it at all) directly under the pad on the floor of 85F.

Some of us have experimented and found that when the chicks make contact with the pad, as it is designed to do, they are getting the benefit of a temperature of 95 to 100F, even though the temp on the floor is 85.

Your hot ambient temps will naturally require a lower setting on the pad to avoid it being too hot in the cave, so it's great you're having a "dry run"!

Now try to stop worrying!
 


We are on test run mode. Our 3 chicks arrive Fri/Sat. This is on setting 2. It will come up to 95 at the center. We are in south Fl. My frame is 2" at the back and graduates to 4" at the front. At setting 2, temps range from 98 to 93 under the hen. I can't find a,happy medium. I'm going to try a lighter weight towel on top. The crate is lined with a puppy pad on the bottom, then shavings, then paper towels. I'm figuring on removing the paper towels after a few days. If anyone can offer suggestions on how to get this more accurate that would be great. They're in the warmest room in the house. AC is off in that room. Room temps vary from 86 (late afternoon down to 76 in the morning. I'm really nervous.
That's what makes heating pad brooding such a departure from conventional heat lamp brooding. You want the place you're brooding to be as cool as possible, outdoors even. The only warm spot is directly under the heating pad. And it's not supposed to be 95* inside the cave. That's not how it works. You're not trying to heat up the whole inside. It's the direct contact with the pad, mimicking snuggling up against a broody hen, that warms the chicks.
 
686'...lol. Probably very different, I live 15 miles east of Lake Michigan, that effects our weather a great deal.
Was mid 70's Sunday but dry and breezy, got up to 80+ and muggy yesterday....YUK!
Forecast sez: much cooler for the next 10 days...Yay!

Yeah way different as far as elevation goes, your a low lander ;). We are after all in the mile high city. I couldn't live back east due to the humidity, my hair would be a Brillo pad all the time. :D
 
Last edited:
Chicks will be 3 weeks tomorrow and needed a larger area to live until we build the coop. Hopefully that will happen this weekend. I took chunks of boxes and pushed them together on a pallet, lined the bottom with a couple inches of shavings and then lifted MHP up on 4x4 posts with shavings under it. Still using the dish drainer turned upside down with the pad and towel on top. I did move their original perch that they have been using rather successfully into the new home but as you can see with the larger box and new space, they are choosing to perch on MHP and have themselves fluffed out instead. At just 3 weeks, their bodies are almost completely feathered with the exception of the head and neck. As this is our first batch, I am not sure how that compares to "traditional" brooder chicks. Temp outdoors is around 40° so garage has to be somewhere north of that. The small box on the floor was their home until this morning. I swear they doubled in size last night....




 
Chicks will be 3 weeks tomorrow and needed a larger area to live until we build the coop. Hopefully that will happen this weekend. I took chunks of boxes and pushed them together on a pallet, lined the bottom with a couple inches of shavings and then lifted MHP up on 4x4 posts with shavings under it. Still using the dish drainer turned upside down with the pad and towel on top. I did move their original perch that they have been using rather successfully into the new home but as you can see with the larger box and new space, they are choosing to perch on MHP and have themselves fluffed out instead. At just 3 weeks, their bodies are almost completely feathered with the exception of the head and neck. As this is our first batch, I am not sure how that compares to "traditional" brooder chicks. Temp outdoors is around 40° so garage has to be somewhere north of that. The small box on the floor was their home until this morning. I swear they doubled in size last night....




They look feathered in enough that you can ditch the heating pad entirely and just use a 'huddle box'.
 
Tiny bird, HUGE personality!

"I don't WANT to sit at the little bird table!"
wink.png


Quote:
Nothing wrong with the inverter. I bet you find other uses for it in the future.

Hi and thanks. I have checked out the sexing of EE thread, the bird in question is an OE, not sure if the same sexing tips apply, or not.

I think they would be the same. An Olive Egger is just a blue egg laying breed crossed with a very dark brown laying breed.

Thanks everybody for the help. I am going today to see if they have the breeds still that I want, since I wasn't able to go yesterday. If they do they should be at least a week old by now or very close and I would be putting them in with my 2 week old chicks. Of the 5 I have now, three are a bit bigger then the other two, so maybe my smallest chick will be happier having the younger chicks in there. Safety in numbers and such. I'll let you know how it goes if I end up doing it and post pictures later. However this does mean my DH will have to get his butt in gear on our coop...maybe a few more chicks will encourage him to build it faster.

Oh, good idea!!! Keep getting 2 new chicks every day until the coop is done
lau.gif

Or maybe they just get tired of being in a chicken's armpit.
th.gif

lau.gif


Finally got some good shots of my 5 weekers
big_smile.png




Nice loooking flock.
 
Thank you @bruceha2000! This is only about half of them, it's hard to get pics of all 19 LOL! They are all over the place so quickly! And several with "bathing" in the pine shavings *eye roll*
We let them outside yesterday for a bit and U thought I might be able to get some more pics...nope. All of them were blurry :/
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom