Having never been fortunate enough to have a broody hen, all of my chickens have been brooder raised. I've hit every common complication in the books; coccidiosis; pasty butt; chilling; drowning. Fun times, not. Heat sources have burned out, been knocked over, exploded, melted, lost and in the last 4 days I've lost power twice for over 8 hours each time. It became impractical to rely on supplemental heat. 
So instead I did what I've already had success with before. Take my day old chicks and put them in the brooder with my 3wk old chicks. In broad daylight with no previous introduction. And it was fine. The older chicks couldn't care less about the new additions. And what's more, the older chicks don't need additional heat so I retract it.
The day olds know how life works and when they get cold they go under an older chick. The older chicks aren't even phased. No pecks, no running away. They just let the littles snuggle right under them. First time doing this I used two cockerels. This time, 3 pullets and one cockerel. Most often it is the male who takes them.
The chicks wean themselves by 3 weeks and all is good. No pasty butt ever happens and nobody complains about temperature.
		
		
	
	
		
	 
See the fuzzy? The other is in the back, under another chick.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			So instead I did what I've already had success with before. Take my day old chicks and put them in the brooder with my 3wk old chicks. In broad daylight with no previous introduction. And it was fine. The older chicks couldn't care less about the new additions. And what's more, the older chicks don't need additional heat so I retract it.
The day olds know how life works and when they get cold they go under an older chick. The older chicks aren't even phased. No pecks, no running away. They just let the littles snuggle right under them. First time doing this I used two cockerels. This time, 3 pullets and one cockerel. Most often it is the male who takes them.
The chicks wean themselves by 3 weeks and all is good. No pasty butt ever happens and nobody complains about temperature.
See the fuzzy? The other is in the back, under another chick.
	
 
 At what age does the show-stopping Mille fluer pattern fully blossom? Or are these more plain that usual?  
 


