She just drank some more water and actually are a few pieces of crumble, so hopefully she's getting better.
She's also starting to run around the brooder more with her buddies.

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She just drank some more water and actually are a few pieces of crumble, so hopefully she's getting better.She's also starting to run around the brooder more with her buddies.![]()
Well this afternoon I stapled some fleece over the wire front of the rabbit hutch, put in a basket, but I need to trim down the front of the basket so that it's high enough to hold in bedding but low enough for chicks to get in and out of. I'm not worried about predators and the chicks, and I'm only slightly worried about Lucy successfully keeping eggs warm enough. I'm gonna let her give it a try sitting on them out in the chicken run in the hutch. If it doesn't work out well, I'll change things up for next time I guess, but DH isn't very happy with the suggestion of bringing the hutch in the garage, so outside it will stay for now.
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Thanks! That's helpful, I've never done this before so I didn't know what to have in there for now. I'll take a pic of what I have and y'all can tell me what to do to make it chick safe. I'm going to move her in there tonight before I go to bed and see where she's at tomorrow morning.
Quote: The only thing I have to say, which is moot since it should warm up here hopefully this week, I would add a small amount of heat for her if is really cold like it has been. But only because she will be expending too much energy trying to keep herself and the eggs warm and I notice they don't come off the eggs to eat as often or for very long so the eggs don't get too cold. Which means she isn't getting much in the way of food, so she may lose too much weight. Just a thought. I got a 100 watt ceramic bulb from the pet store, works great. I also put a heat lamp out during this cold snap in the food area so the babies can come out from under mom a little more easily and get enough food. I am not trying to provide enough heat that babies are slow to feather but it's something to think about. But again, this cold snap may be over soon, so by the time you move her and get eggs under her and they hatch, you may not have to worry. My two silkie chicks that a broody hatched are doing fine and feathering quickly, but I do have a white heat lamp over the feeder and water area. At least for now. They probably won't need it by the end of the week.I do agree with Travis, that you should feed her something with higher protien. It will keep her warmer.![]()
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Quote: I do have to agree with Sara. It doesn't have to be WARM, warm, just not freezing. I have two silkies brooding two eggs together. I have a heated dag pad in the house, under the shavings for them, and a 50 watt ceramic bulb over the top. It is not warm by any stretch of the imagination at this point. I will turn off the pad as soo as the temp goes above freezing here at my house. It hasn't gotten much above that yet.