Day one: I got my chicks in the mail. I had heated the brooder up to 33 degrees celcius. Perfect!
Not so.
The thermometer had failed. The temperature was WAY too high. 18 out of 22 chicks died.
My lesson: Always get a second thermometer to check the temperature, and keep the heat lamp a MINIMUM of 24 inches away from the brooder floor.
One week later: Got 26 chicks in the mail! Put them in my bigger brooder and used an electric thermometer. 3 chicks died before day 4. Not as bad.....
My lesson: Don't give the chicks TOO much space- if there is a cold spot, the chicks could fall asleep there and develop a cold.
At 5 weeks, all but one chick were fully feathered. The one had been sick, so he didn't grow as fast. I put them outside at this time.
My lesson: once chicks are older they need a LOT more water and feed. They went without feed a couple nights, poor things.
11.5 weeks: I found out I need to book my butcher appointment a little sooner. I booked it when they were about 8 weeks old. The earlier the better!
They ended up being about 12.5 weeks old when they were butchered, since I booked a little too late.
My lesson: book waaaaaaay in advance, it is no problem with the butchers to cancel!
Since these broilers were Western Rustics, I decided to butcher them at 12 weeks. They are at the butcher as I speak.
I hope anyone else who is new to raising chicks sees this, so you can learn from my mistakes! Thanks for reading.
Not so.
The thermometer had failed. The temperature was WAY too high. 18 out of 22 chicks died.
My lesson: Always get a second thermometer to check the temperature, and keep the heat lamp a MINIMUM of 24 inches away from the brooder floor.
One week later: Got 26 chicks in the mail! Put them in my bigger brooder and used an electric thermometer. 3 chicks died before day 4. Not as bad.....
My lesson: Don't give the chicks TOO much space- if there is a cold spot, the chicks could fall asleep there and develop a cold.
At 5 weeks, all but one chick were fully feathered. The one had been sick, so he didn't grow as fast. I put them outside at this time.
My lesson: once chicks are older they need a LOT more water and feed. They went without feed a couple nights, poor things.
11.5 weeks: I found out I need to book my butcher appointment a little sooner. I booked it when they were about 8 weeks old. The earlier the better!
They ended up being about 12.5 weeks old when they were butchered, since I booked a little too late.
My lesson: book waaaaaaay in advance, it is no problem with the butchers to cancel!
Since these broilers were Western Rustics, I decided to butcher them at 12 weeks. They are at the butcher as I speak.
I hope anyone else who is new to raising chicks sees this, so you can learn from my mistakes! Thanks for reading.
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