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

My brooders are in the barn, my chicks made it successfully last winter. That was the first time I ever hatched any eggs out! Read on this website: someone in Wyoming had their chicks in their barn with a heatingpad setup, in extreme weather. They said they did very well. I got the brooders from the local Show Chicken breeder. They are large @4 ft by 3 ft x @2.5 ft tall. They came hard wired up with a heat lamp. Someone on this site suggested puppy training pads and that worked great. I got a deal at the local store, and that is what I'll use this year! Easy cleanup, absorbs splashed water! Put two on the heating pad over a blanket, they protected the pad. Kept the lil chicks feet clean. They seemed to be on the pad more than under! I'll angle it this year. During the extreme weather, I put hot water in 2 liter pop bottles and put them inside the brooder. I was up all night checking in on them. That is one good thing about Michigan -30 one night and 24 the next day.
Have the farm innovator heat pad for them to stand on, also. It's covered in hard plastic. They seem to prefer the snuggly heating pad.
I think a couple of the Sunbeam King Size will work.
Have some ideas, now I have to think Safety and Energy cost.
 
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My brooders are in the barn, my chicks made it successfully last winter. That was the first time I ever hatched any eggs out! Read on this website: someone in Wyoming had their chicks in their barn with a heatingpad setup, in extreme weather. They said they did very well. I got the brooders from the local Show Chicken breeder. They are large @4 ft by 3 ft x @2.5 ft tall. They came hard wired up with a heat lamp. Someone on this site suggested puppy training pads and that worked great. I got a deal at the local store, and that is what I'll use this year! Easy cleanup, absorbs splashed water! Put two on the heating pad over a blanket, they protected the pad. Kept the lil chicks feet clean. They seemed to be on the pad more than under! I'll angle it this year. During the extreme weather, I put hot water in 2 liter pop bottles and put them inside the brooder. I was up all night checking in on them. That is one good thing about Michigan -30 one night and 24 the next day.
Have the farm innovator heat pad for them to stand on, also. It's covered in hard plastic. They seem to prefer the snuggly heating pad.
I think a couple of the Sunbeam King Size will work.
Have some ideas, now I have to think Safety and Energy cost.
I am the person from Wyoming who raises chicks outside, but they are in a clear plastic covered outside run attached to our coop and definitely not in temps as low as the ones you are talking.
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Spring is chick season - unfortunately around here spring means temps that fluctuate wildly from 14 degrees one day to 35 the next. But I'd never consider it with temps to -30 as you mentioned you are expecting. I realize I'm pushing it at the temperatures I do raise chicks, but when those little stinkers go out there it's about 47 degrees warmer here (difference from -30 to 17) than what you are talking about, and the winter is breaking, there are more hours of sunshine helping warm the run, and winter is not in full swing with the prospect of weeks of sustained cold.

Obviously if you did it successfully in the past, then you have hit upon the secret to doing it very well and know your weather patterns and setup. So far be it from me to mess with a system that worked! However, we do get a lot of new visitors to this site and I don't want anyone getting the idea that I'd normally advocate raising chicks in the extremes that you experience during your Michigan winters. Having lived for 5 years in the Great Lakes region, I know how doggone cold and damp it gets there, that's for sure! <shudder> If the combination of heat lamp, heating pads, pop bottles and Farm Innovators' heat pad worked, then you would far know better than I what your setup is capable of handling. But the idea behind MHP is to keep it simple, keep it safe, and to eliminate stress on the chicks and the keepers, and to get heat lamps out of our brooders completely.

So in your case I would most strongly recommend the heating pad that turns itself back on in the event of a power outage so that if you ever had an outage, the pad would be back on as quickly as possible. I think I gave you that link already. But please, be safe with this heat combination, and have a back-up plan to any heat that relies on electricity. I well remember being without power for 3 days when we lived in that area and can't imagine how I'd have kept chicks warm had I been raising them then. I could barely keep us warm!
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Good luck to you on your hatch! And remember, your dues in the Broody Brigade are photos of your Littles!!
 
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So in your case I would most strongly recommend the heating pad that turns itself back on in the event of a power outage so that if you ever had an outage, the pad would be back on as quickly as possible. I think I gave you that link already. But please, be safe with this heat combination, and have a back-up plan to any heat that relies on electricity. I well remember being without power for 3 days when we lived in that area and can't imagine how I'd have kept chicks warm had I been raising them then. I could barely keep us warm!
barnie.gif


Good luck to you on your hatch! And remember, your dues in the Broody Brigade are photos of your Littles!!
A backup generator [preferably] with an auto ignition, perhaps? I would think anyone living in an area with such extreme winter conditions would have one.
 
At what age do you all start turning down the heating pad? I currently have it set on level 6, and they're in the house, but I'm wondering if I need to turn it down a little. My chicks are only 4 days old, but they're sleeping on top of it and spending most of their time running around the brooder. They did sleep under it last night. I've also noticed that some of them have diarrhea poops. Doesn't this mean it's too warm? What are some of the signs you all use to know when to turn the heating pad down?
 
If they are spending more time on top of the pad, than under it, it's time to turn it down. There are no hard and fast rules. Observation is key with any brooding method. If they are under it almost all the time, they need it warmer. If they aren't under it at all, turn it down.
 
x2. If they are in the house, they didn't need it at 6 to start with, so try down 2 notches and see how they do. If they start to huddle, pop it back up one notch, but do give it a couple of hours to see if they adjust a bit before you do that. I made that mistake the first time I did MHP...had it up to 6 indoors and they seemed fine but weren't going under much. I was new enough at this not to know how much "enough" really was, but I knew it should be longer than they were staying. So I turned it down, and the first time I heard a distress cheep I ran back in there and turned it back up, which put me right back to square one! Later during the day I turned it back down, got busy and didn't check them, and the next thing I knew they'd figured out comfort all on their own and some were peacefully snoozing underneath, some were running around, and others were settled on top watching the world around them.
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Thank you for the advice! It's so nice to have a place to ask questions since I'm new to chicken keeping. I'm planning on moving them down to the basement in a week or so, where it will be a good bit colder. I'll plan to observe and figure out what the setting should be then.
 

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