Transition from Heat Lamp to Brooder Plate

Jmiller13581

Hatching
May 7, 2025
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0
2
7 days old chicks today. Heat lamp has been above them ~15 inches, thermometer shows 93 degrees. I wanted to transition to a brooder plate, so I warmed it up on medium setting and placed it in the brooder. I turned off the heat lamp for around an hour. When I came to check on them, they were all huddled together, peeping, and fluffed out. They were outside of the plate, did not seem to feel the heat.
I panicked and immediately turned the heat lamp back on. Now they are active, eating, and digging around again. They are now sleeping in the middle of the brooder between the heat lamp and cold side.

What did I do wrong? Is there a better way to transition to brooder plate? Did I shock their system?
 
7 days old chicks today. Heat lamp has been above them ~15 inches, thermometer shows 93 degrees. I wanted to transition to a brooder plate, so I warmed it up on medium setting and placed it in the brooder. I turned off the heat lamp for around an hour. When I came to check on them, they were all huddled together, peeping, and fluffed out. They were outside of the plate, did not seem to feel the heat.
I panicked and immediately turned the heat lamp back on. Now they are active, eating, and digging around again. They are now sleeping in the middle of the brooder between the heat lamp and cold side.

What did I do wrong? Is there a better way to transition to brooder plate? Did I shock their system?
The brooder plate should be low enough they can snuggle under it like they would a mama hen. If it was too high (height not temperature) they probably got chilled because the brooder plate has to touch them for them to feel the warmth. You can press your hand against it to get an idea of how it works. I've only used brooder plates so I'm not sure if it takes time for them to figure it out or not. I put a few chicks under the brooder plate when I first put them in the brooder and they tell the the others where it's warm and they'll huddle under it when/if they need it.

They may also be bothered that it's suddenly dark if they're used to having the light from the heat lamp all night. You could try a small night light near by, or let light in through a cracked door. Good luck.
 

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