You've gotten great advice. I'll just add to #4 and #5 suggestions by saying I have used cardboard zip-tied to a wire dog crate with great success. The chicks will get out and not always get back in if the wire is left plain. I am posting a picture of how I did one of mine. I used high cardboard in the back to give "privacy" and lower cardboard in the front half and on the door side so I could see in, the flock could see in and the mama and chicks got some ventilation. Be sure there are no gaps where the cardboard meets or they will find a way to get stuck there.
I move mine out during the day (weather permitting) into a chicken tractor on grass when they are 2 or 3 days old. Once the rest of the flock has gone to roost in the evening. I open the tractor door and shoo the mama and chicks out. She takes then to the coop (mine has ground level access), often stopping and scratching and showing them goodies, and into the broody box. I close them up and repeat for the next week or so. By that time, the chicks know mama and the flock knows they are "members". I let them out of the tractor earlier, when the flock is still out but starting to think about going to roost. The mamas will eventually stop taking them to the crate and use one of the lower nest boxes. At that point, I'll remove the crate......or clean it and get it ready for the next one!![]()
Same hen and her brood at 4 weeks old on a low ladder perch that is resting on the abandoned crate.
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Adorable pictures! Really nice set up and great explanation for an option on brooding/integration. Thank you!