SaturnFowl
In the Brooder
- Mar 11, 2020
- 6
- 0
- 32
Hello! I’ve currently got four chicks here, around 4 weeks old, and I was wondering where they should sleep at night now that they’re bigger and close to being fully feathered.
(I also have adult hens but they haven’t warmed up the chicks just yet, and they’re not motherly.)
During the day, I have a pen for them to stay (but a good portion of the day is also spent roaming) that can hold a heat lamp. (3rd image) Only problem is, it doesn’t have a floor to it, so during the night, where rats are most active and my dog isn’t outside to defend them, rats could dig into the pen. Therefore, I’ve been moving them to their inside bin at night, but they’ve outgrown it at this point. Too small for how active they are even at night, and they often shove bedding on top of their food or water, cutting their access to it.
I also have a portion of a coop outside where they could stay at night, that closes up completely and is safe from predators, It’s mostly enclosed, with one wire window. (Image 4 and 5) But, temperatures here can drop to 40 degrees fareheight at night, which seems too cold to me.
What do you all think? Are they feathered enough to handle the outside coop? Are rats not a problem at this stage? Is warming up the chicks to the adults what I should be trying to do? When will they be ready for the weather or rats?
(I also have adult hens but they haven’t warmed up the chicks just yet, and they’re not motherly.)
During the day, I have a pen for them to stay (but a good portion of the day is also spent roaming) that can hold a heat lamp. (3rd image) Only problem is, it doesn’t have a floor to it, so during the night, where rats are most active and my dog isn’t outside to defend them, rats could dig into the pen. Therefore, I’ve been moving them to their inside bin at night, but they’ve outgrown it at this point. Too small for how active they are even at night, and they often shove bedding on top of their food or water, cutting their access to it.
I also have a portion of a coop outside where they could stay at night, that closes up completely and is safe from predators, It’s mostly enclosed, with one wire window. (Image 4 and 5) But, temperatures here can drop to 40 degrees fareheight at night, which seems too cold to me.
What do you all think? Are they feathered enough to handle the outside coop? Are rats not a problem at this stage? Is warming up the chicks to the adults what I should be trying to do? When will they be ready for the weather or rats?
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