Heat lamps for chick brooders and plant growing needs will still be available. It is the normal incandescent bulbs for household use that are no longer being manufactured.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ouch! I hadn't thought of that! The big heat lamp bulbs ARE incandescents!!!
I've been considering those Ecoglow brooders -- more expensive than a heat lamp, but if we can't get heat lamps anymore....
Alternatively, do all my chick brooding while we are running the wood stove for heat, and keep them close to the stove. That would be dusty, having them in the house for so long. Going to have to think about this.
Kathleen
ETA: Yes, broody hens -- if you are raising your own chicks. But if you are raising bought chicks, might not have a hen broody when you need one. Broody hens may become much more valuable in the future!
That's good to hear. One of the things I was considering with the ecoglow is that I hope to eventually switch to solar power, and the ecoglow would take a lot less power to run than the heat lamps. I do still have several heat lamp bulbs on hand (having had a couple die on me, leaving chicks cold until I discovered what had happened, I keep spares), and I think I'll try the wood stove at least with our first batch of chicks this year, but will be putting an ecoglow on the to-buy list for later. (Have to get an incubator first.)Ecoglows are wonderful. Much cheaper to run, and I like the slightly lower temp, and not having light 24/7. I made the switch this year to them and am going to be ordering about 8 more of them this coming year.
Edit: And when I mean cheaper to run, if you're using a heat lamp by the time your first batch of chicks are outside you will have paid for the ecoglow.
Hah, that's awesome! I'm following a thread here on BYC where a lady is incubating 2 eggs in her bra right now! You should share your story I'm sure she would love it!A story my grandmother told, and I don't remember all of it, but her mother had found an egg that she wanted to hatch -- may have been under a broody hen for a while, I can't recall the whole story. Anyway, Great-grandma put that egg into her bra, in her cleavage, and kept it there -- and it hatched! Lots of ways to skin a cat -- or hatch eggs, or brood chicks, LOL!
Just popping in to say "Hi" from Oregon. I'm going to be getting some chicks this spring, got my breeds narrowed down to my favorite
choices, and am currently cooking up plans for a brooder and a coop. I stopped by Ludeman's, which is very close to my current residence, and met some girls and chicks up close. Love the birds even more.![]()
The slightly older chicks would follow my finger when I wiggled it in their line of sight outside of the cage. (If this isn't ok interaction with chickens please do let me know)
I also got wind of a beginner chicken class there next month I'll be attending. I'll be keeping my eye on this thread, and tackling all the pages to it soon enough to look for breeder information or places to get chicks.
Look forward to joining the local chicken communities. Oh! And I should add that the breeds that have caught my attention are Silkies, Ameraucanas, and Wyandottes.![]()