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

I have studied the articles by @Blooie and by @aart , and I have tried (but failed) to read everything on this thread.
No worries @RoyalChick , too much chat to wade thru.

I find the MHP idea very appealing and have designed a brooder (or jail or hospital) into my coop design so when my coop is finally finished and I am ready to introduce new chicks into my flock this feels like the way to go to minimize social disruption.
Excellent! Have you seen this:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/integrating-new-birds-at-4-weeks-old.72603/

@Blooie also has an article on 'brooding in coop':
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/yes-you-certainly-can-brood-chicks-outdoors.68067/
And there may be others too.

But I am worried about quarantine. Elsewhere on this site people say you should quarantine for at least 30 days. But by then the little chicks would barely need the MHP and will be quite large.
So how do you guys handle the quarantine issue when using this method to introduce new chicks?
If you get your chicks from a hatchery or farm store, you don't need to quarantine, IMO.
So what is the source of your chicks?
 
Excellent! Have you seen this:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/integrating-new-birds-at-4-weeks-old.72603/

@Blooie also has an article on 'brooding in coop':
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/yes-you-certainly-can-brood-chicks-outdoors.68067/

If you get your chicks from a hatchery or farm store, you don't need to quarantine, IMO.
So what is the source of your chicks?

Thanks Aart. Yes, I read those articles first (actually before finding this thread).
I haven't got the new chicks yet. As you may remember from my coop construction thread https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/coop-on-a-hillside-roost-heights.1338548/page-6 , I still haven't quite got a coop set up.

In terms of source of the chicks, I am thinking of going to a nearby farm who have a hatchery business. Others on this site have recommended them too - it is called V&R Homestead. It is within easy driving distance from me and I sort of prefer the idea of local. But then I get tempted by specific breeds and wonder about hatcheries. So in short, I haven't decided!

I definitely do not want to introduce disease into my little flock (I would never forgive myself). On the other hand growing up inside the coop seems way more natural to me than introducing them later. So I am not sure what to do really. I am probably a month away from being ready for chicks so it is not a super urgent decision - but I do like to plan!
 
Thank you, @janiedoe. It takes a lot of good people to keep information on this thread up-to-date and answer questions..... see how quickly @aart answered the quarantine question with links and information? Like that!!

@RoyalChick, fielding your question is a little outside of my expertise. I never quarantine them, but my chicks are either hatchery chicks or home incubator chicks. I‘ve never purchased from a farm or breeder where the chicks may have been exposed to something I could bring home to my birds. But frankly I’d be more concerned with what I might bring home to my flock on the bottom of my shoes or my clothing more than worrying about the chicks themselves. I could be wrong so don’t let that make a decision for you.

It also depends somewhat on how that farmer houses his chicks...if they are hatched and brooded away from the main flock, they should be fine. If he has to catch them scurrying among the flock, I’d rethink. So there you have my answer, which is a “possible maybe”. :oops:
 
Thank you, @janiedoe. It takes a lot of good people to keep information on this thread up-to-date and answer questions..... see how quickly @aart answered the quarantine question with links and information? Like that!!

@RoyalChick, fielding your question is a little outside of my expertise. I never quarantine them, but my chicks are either hatchery chicks or home incubator chicks. I‘ve never purchased from a farm or breeder where the chicks may have been exposed to something I could bring home to my birds. But frankly I’d be more concerned with what I might bring home to my flock on the bottom of my shoes or my clothing more than worrying about the chicks themselves. I could be wrong so don’t let that make a decision for you.

It also depends somewhat on how that farmer houses his chicks...if they are hatched and brooded away from the main flock, they should be fine. If he has to catch them scurrying among the flock, I’d rethink. So there you have my answer, which is a “possible maybe”. :oops:

Thank you all. Very helpful. I am going to ask about the housing of the chicks before I decide where to get them. Makes sense to me now.
 
I have studied the articles by @Blooie and by @aart , and I have tried (but failed) to read everything on this thread. I find the MHP idea very appealing and have designed a brooder (or jail or hospital) into my coop design so when my coop is finally finished and I am ready to introduce new chicks into my flock this feels like the way to go to minimize social disruption.
But I am worried about quarantine. Elsewhere on this site people say you should quarantine for at least 30 days. But by then the little chicks would barely need the MHP and will be quite large.
So how do you guys handle the quarantine issue when using this method to introduce new chicks?
I ALWAYS come back to this thread when I get new chicks, I pull out my home made "mommy hut" and refresh my memory then pick up my new chicks from local feed store where "Fran the chicken lady" has never been wrong in sexing the chicks. And a few years ago when I told Fran that I was not only adding the chicks to my existing flock, I had also ordered 2 started pullets to be mail delivered a few weeks later because I my local store didn't have the breed I wanted. Fran get very stern with me and said I really don't want you to do that. She told me stories of people who had wiped out their entire flock by introducing to many newbies from to many different places. I didn't follow her advice. I got the started pullets through the mail and I separated them by wire screens in my coop to do a transition but I did not quarantine them away in their own separate place.... And sure enough within about 10 days one of the Purples (Lavender O,) had a cough. And it got worse and worse. I immediately separated the 2, moved to my greenhouse about a half acre away from my coop and I treated her back to health with all kinds of thing I had to dump down her throat. It was a lot of work but she did recover. And I think I only got really lucky that respiratory illness did not spread to the rest of the flock. I think in fact because it was warm out and they were free ranging much more than staying in the coop and I had good ventilation... But that close call has made me very cautious and for sure doing a quarantine of at least a few weeks with newbies whether they are babies or started, just to make sure no illness surfaces. I keep babies in my house OR my greenhouse with mommy hut for 2 weeks (I know 30days is suggested but for me, I think illness will show up within 2 weeks,) THEN I move them with hut to my coop where I have dividers to make both the house and run a duplex so that the littles will be safe from mean bigs. At a few months they do okay together, first free ranging. I don't know if this helps you or not, just my personal preferences and IMHO a better safe than sorry approach. GOOD LUCK. It's fun baby time again for me and I'm so happy to be back to this awesome thread and group :)
 
I ALWAYS come back to this thread when I get new chicks, I pull out my home made "mommy hut" and refresh my memory then pick up my new chicks from local feed store where "Fran the chicken lady" has never been wrong in sexing the chicks. And a few years ago when I told Fran that I was not only adding the chicks to my existing flock, I had also ordered 2 started pullets to be mail delivered a few weeks later because I my local store didn't have the breed I wanted. Fran get very stern with me and said I really don't want you to do that. She told me stories of people who had wiped out their entire flock by introducing to many newbies from to many different places. I didn't follow her advice. I got the started pullets through the mail and I separated them by wire screens in my coop to do a transition but I did not quarantine them away in their own separate place.... And sure enough within about 10 days one of the Purples (Lavender O,) had a cough. And it got worse and worse. I immediately separated the 2, moved to my greenhouse about a half acre away from my coop and I treated her back to health with all kinds of thing I had to dump down her throat. It was a lot of work but she did recover. And I think I only got really lucky that respiratory illness did not spread to the rest of the flock. I think in fact because it was warm out and they were free ranging much more than staying in the coop and I had good ventilation... But that close call has made me very cautious and for sure doing a quarantine of at least a few weeks with newbies whether they are babies or started, just to make sure no illness surfaces. I keep babies in my house OR my greenhouse with mommy hut for 2 weeks (I know 30days is suggested but for me, I think illness will show up within 2 weeks,) THEN I move them with hut to my coop where I have dividers to make both the house and run a duplex so that the littles will be safe from mean bigs. At a few months they do okay together, first free ranging. I don't know if this helps you or not, just my personal preferences and IMHO a better safe than sorry approach. GOOD LUCK. It's fun baby time again for me and I'm so happy to be back to this awesome thread and group :)
Yes that is what I am scared about. I really am not sure what to do!
 
I have my MHP with 6 little chicks that I will move outside next weekend. They are 2 weeks old. It snowed today so I didnt put them out. I didnt want to get cold😜 i have used the MHP for 3 years now and I love it.
 

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