Hi all,
I had a hen sneak away and hatch 5 babies on Oct. 10. It was nice and sunny and warm, so I didn't worry too much. However it is going to get seriously frigid here in a few days and I am concerned. She is still spending the night with them in a nesting box (their choice), but increasingly she, of course, is trying to 'cut the cord'. With day temps going down below 20 F and night temps as low as 6 F, I don't know if they can sustain and I don't know if I can count on Mom is going to continue her 'duties'.
I don't have an intermediary spot, temp.-wise between the coop and indoors and it is impractical and probably unsafe to put a heat lamp in the coop.
Are we ok here? Any ideas?
They live in a very large coop with 10 grown chickens (1 gentle rooster) and 2 ducks and have been well accepted into their tight-knit flock.
TIA for your time and concern,
Marc Miller
N.E. Penna., US
I had a hen sneak away and hatch 5 babies on Oct. 10. It was nice and sunny and warm, so I didn't worry too much. However it is going to get seriously frigid here in a few days and I am concerned. She is still spending the night with them in a nesting box (their choice), but increasingly she, of course, is trying to 'cut the cord'. With day temps going down below 20 F and night temps as low as 6 F, I don't know if they can sustain and I don't know if I can count on Mom is going to continue her 'duties'.
I don't have an intermediary spot, temp.-wise between the coop and indoors and it is impractical and probably unsafe to put a heat lamp in the coop.
Are we ok here? Any ideas?
They live in a very large coop with 10 grown chickens (1 gentle rooster) and 2 ducks and have been well accepted into their tight-knit flock.
TIA for your time and concern,
Marc Miller
N.E. Penna., US