Brooding with a broody during the winter is fine. But it's those that don't have a mamma that produce a dilemma.
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Well.....I got very small (maybe 4"X4") plugs and they tore them apart and I guess ate them? I didnt know what size to get and there are only the four chicks. I don't see anything left of them, lol. So they got some sand and soil and grass and moss. I also added some coop litter and some partly decomposed leaves I dug out from under the snow. And lots of water and all the chick starter they want. I have moved the light a wee bit further and they seem happy....very active and no distressed peeping. Do you think one of those microwave heat pet pads would be good to use with them? I was thinking for when I begin to put them outside I could put them in their pen and use a cardboard nest with straw and the pad under the straw....maybe wrapped in a towel. When I think they are old enough and the weather is right I could move their "nest" into the big coop after dark and they would have that until i know the weather is warmer. I would still only do field trips to "The Outside World" until they are older......but I was thinking the pad could be there "hen". They are non toxic and hold heat for several hours.Yes...baby pullets do it too. But so do baby cockerels!@JulesChicks If you've never had chickens before and they will be going out to a new area where there weren't chickens before, I wouldn't worry about getting any litter from the old place. Just dig a sod plug from the yard area where they will be and put that in with them. That will give them exposure to the area they will be going into. You have to change those silly sod plugs about daily as they really mess them up. I just dig out from a place and then take the plug back out and replace it where I dug it from once it's "used"....then get another and so on.![]()