when to move chicks?

my21chickens

Songster
Apr 7, 2021
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Hi! I have 5 chicks they are about 6 weeks old when should I move them to the big coop? I have 15 big chickens who will 1 year old in march. Also I live in NH, the weather has been in the 50s and 60s during the day and at night 40s and 30s. I have been bringing them outside everyday so they can used to each other and they seem fine when they're together.
 
If you are concerned about the temperatures they should be OK at 6 weeks as long as they are out of the wind and have decent ventilation. I've had chicks younger than that go through nights with lower temperatures. The problem may be where they sleep. You never know how that will work out when you integrate.

If you are talking about how to integrate them it gets a lot more complicated. How much room you have in the coop, how much room in the run, the quality of that room, and when it is available are all important factors. By the quality of that room I mean do they have places they can hide from the older ones to break line of sight.

I have been bringing them outside everyday so they can used to each other and they seem fine when they're together.
That is encouraging. If you have sufficient room you may be able to just merge them in with the adults. If you try it that way do it during the day when you can monitor and see how it goes. Sometimes it is that easy. I'll harp on it again, the more room you have the more likely it is to work. If you have a typical tight backyard set-up it's not that likely to be this easy.

The way I'd try this would be to put out extra feeding and watering stations so the older ones cannot bully them away from food and water and then turn the young ones loose. See what happens and base your actions on what you see. If it works out the chicks probably won't go into the coop at dark, you'll have to lock them inside. Wait until it is dark enough that the older ones can't beat them up overnight. Make sure the coop is dark, not lit up by a security camera or something like that through a window. Then be out there first thing the next morning to see how it is going. Do not leave them locked inside that coop with the adults when they are awake until you are comfortable they will be OK. My situation is different from yours but that's practically always two mornings for me. What I often find is the chicks sleep on the coop floor somewhere but after they wake up the chicks are safely up on the roosts while the adults are on the coop floor. My roosts are high enough that they are a safe place away from the adults. I have no idea how big your coop is, what it looks like, or how high your roosts are.

If this doesn't work out put the chicks in a predator-safe weather-safe area across wire form the adults for a while. Proceed from there.
 
If you are concerned about the temperatures they should be OK at 6 weeks as long as they are out of the wind and have decent ventilation. I've had chicks younger than that go through nights with lower temperatures. The problem may be where they sleep. You never know how that will work out when you integrate.

If you are talking about how to integrate them it gets a lot more complicated. How much room you have in the coop, how much room in the run, the quality of that room, and when it is available are all important factors. By the quality of that room I mean do they have places they can hide from the older ones to break line of sight.


That is encouraging. If you have sufficient room you may be able to just merge them in with the adults. If you try it that way do it during the day when you can monitor and see how it goes. Sometimes it is that easy. I'll harp on it again, the more room you have the more likely it is to work. If you have a typical tight backyard set-up it's not that likely to be this easy.

The way I'd try this would be to put out extra feeding and watering stations so the older ones cannot bully them away from food and water and then turn the young ones loose. See what happens and base your actions on what you see. If it works out the chicks probably won't go into the coop at dark, you'll have to lock them inside. Wait until it is dark enough that the older ones can't beat them up overnight. Make sure the coop is dark, not lit up by a security camera or something like that through a window. Then be out there first thing the next morning to see how it is going. Do not leave them locked inside that coop with the adults when they are awake until you are comfortable they will be OK. My situation is different from yours but that's practically always two mornings for me. What I often find is the chicks sleep on the coop floor somewhere but after they wake up the chicks are safely up on the roosts while the adults are on the coop floor. My roosts are high enough that they are a safe place away from the adults. I have no idea how big your coop is, what it looks like, or how high your roosts are.

If this doesn't work out put the chicks in a predator-safe weather-safe area across wire form the adults for a while. Proceed from there.
ok thank you! my coop is 4/8 ft and the roosts are about 3 ft off the ground. and my chicken are almost NEVER the coop the only time they are in there is when they are sleeping
 
ok thank you! my coop is 4/8 ft and the roosts are about 3 ft off the ground. and my chicken are almost NEVER the coop the only time they are in there is when they are sleeping
and we have a giant run!! and yes they do have places were they can hide
 
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I would say that the temperature is fine for 6 week olds. I always incorporate via a 2-week look-dont-touch set up. I find that the babies get picked on when I'm not there even if they're fine when I'm around. If they have the LDT for a few weeks, then incorporation is much safer afterward.
 
I would say that the temperature is fine for 6 week olds. I always incorporate via a 2-week look-dont-touch set up. I find that the babies get picked on when I'm not there even if they're fine when I'm around. If they have the LDT for a few weeks, then incorporation is much safer afterward.
okay thank you!
 
the only problem i have with the chicks and my big chickens is if i'm holding a chick and then piper comes around (piper is one of my big chickens and she is territorial of me she will peck other chickens if she want to be held and i'm holding another chicken) that is the only problem i have with chickens and the chicks. so do you think it is safe for them to move to the coop?
 
You should look at maybe adding on to your coop, at 4x8 that's only 32sqft. That's only a little over 2sqft per bird for your current flock of 15 once you add the other 5 that'll be under 2sqft per bird. It's recommended 4sqft per bird. Just an observation 😉
 
You should look at maybe adding on to your coop, at 4x8 that's only 32sqft. That's only a little over 2sqft per bird for your current flock of 15 once you add the other 5 that'll be under 2sqft per bird. It's recommended 4sqft per bird. Just an observation 😉
ok thank you!!! well do you think it's ok? because like i said they are almost never inside and most of my chickens are bantums and i have 2 silkies
 

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