- What preparations do you make before hatching/buying chicks?
1. Check to see if it is legal to have chickens where you are. What legal restrictions might you have?
2. Decide on your goals. Why do you want chickens? It’s hard to get what you want if you don’t know what you want.
3. Decide what chicks you want. One breed, a variety of breeds, or mixed breeds. Egg layers, meat birds, dual purpose, bantams, or decorative. Show chickens, hatchery quality, or from neighbors. Decide on a source, hatchery, feed store, breeders, or neighbors.
4. Read. Check out the Learning Center at the top of this page. Read different posts in this forum. Ask questions if you don’t understand something. Most hatcheries have good articles online.
5. I think it is important to understand there is no one right way for any of this. We are all unique in so many ways there can be no one way that is right for everyone where every other way is wrong. There is a world of difference in how someone might keep four hens in a small backyard in suburbia versus someone with a flock of multiple roosters and hens in a rural area, let alone differences in northern Australia versus northern Canada. Try to understand if what someone says has any meaning for your circumstances.
6. Have the coop ready. It’s amazing how fast they grow and life often gets in the way of plans and schedules.
7. Have your brooder ready before the chicks come, including bedding, food, and water.
- Tell me about your brooder(s); Also, do you brood indoors or outdoors?
1. There are a few basics for a brooder. It needs food, water, protection from the environment, and protection from predators. It needs to stay dry, a wet brooder is a dangerous brooder. You need one area that is warm enough and one area that is cool enough no matter the outside temperature.
2. There are a lot of different ways to provide heat in a brooder and ways to set them up: heat lamps, heating pads, emitters, hovers, commercial things like the EcoGlow, and so many others. They all come with benefits and disadvantages or limitations. Whichever method you decide to use, be careful running electricity to the device.
3. Other than keeping it dry, to me the most important thing about a brooder is temperature control. Too much heat is just as dangerous as too little. You need to set up the brooder so one area is warm enough in the coolest temperatures while another area is cool enough in the warmest temperatures. Inside a climate controlled area that isn’t that hard to do but if you brood where you have temperature swings it can be a lot more challenging. I’ve had chicks in my brooder in the coop since the end of January. One morning last week it was 18 degrees F. Two days later my high was 81F. My chicks were fine in both extremes.
4.
My 3’ x 6’ brooder is in the coop, the top is a droppings board. I use heat lamps on one end to keep one area warm enough. I have good ventilation up high in that “chimney” off to the left where I keep one heat lamp so I can raise or lower it. No matter the outside temperature my chicks find a comfortable area. Many people would be surprised at how much time they spend in the cooler areas, especially when they get a little older.
In colder temperatures I use two heat lamps in case one fails. I throw away the clamps that come with the heat lamps as I consider them dangerous. Instead I wire the lamps so neither I nor the chickens can knock them down. I have 250 watt bulbs in them right now. In warmer times I may use only one heat lamp and the bulb might be 125 or 75 watts. During the day right now I often unplug one lamp, they don’t need it.
- How to raise healthy, strong chicks. (Supplements/Feed/Heat management, etc)
1. A wet brooder is a dangerous brooder, so it is important to keep the brooder dry. My brooder has a ½” hardware cloth bottom so the poop falls on through. It’s collected in plastic bins underneath. Most people can’t do that, especially if they brood in the house. Wet can come from two places. If the poop gets thick enough it won’t dry out. Or a waterer may leak or spill.
2. The drinking water needs to stay clean. There are all kinds of different types of waterers. If the chicks can poop in it or scratch trash in it, you need to totally empty that waterer at least every two days to interrupt the life cycle of the bug that can cause Cocci. Every day is better. There is another issue too, other than cocci or them pooping in the water that applies if the brooder is where mosquitoes have access. This applies to adult chickens in the coop or outside in the run. Mosquitoes breed in standing water. Even if you use nipples or some watering method the chickens cannot poop in, you need to screen the water reservoir or empty the waterer every couple of days to stop it from becoming a mosquito breeding ground. In addition to the human problems with a lot of mosquitoes around, they can spread fowl pox to your chickens.
3. I feed regular Chick Starter (20% protein) to my chicks for the first month or so, then cut back on the protein to more of a Grower. I do not feed any sort of medicated feed. I just have not had the need to feed anything else.
4. I only feed one supplement to my chicks, dirt from the run. I believe in building up their immune system so they can live a healthy life. By feeding dirt from the run, they get grit into their gizzard, they get any probiotics the adults have, plus they get exposed to whatever the flock has so they can start building up their flock immunities. By the time my chicks leave the brooder and hit the ground, their immune systems are able to keep them healthy.