Brooder 101:
When Hatching Eggs are hatching...what do I do???!!!
BEFORE your chicks are due to hatch, you should set up a brooder. This
is the hatchlings’ nursery area. Major components that you will
need is a way to confine the chicks to a small area (brooder), brooder
flooring, heat lamp(s) and thermometer, waterer(s), feed and feeder(s)
and a lot of TLC.
BROODER: Your newly
hatched babies will need to be kept away from drafts and dangers such
as pets, rats, snakes, stray cats/dogs and other like dangers. The
brooder area could be a large plastic tote, 20 gallon aquarium, hooded
cat litter box (new, of course!) for very small broods, a hard plastic
child’s wading pool, or a custom-made circle of chicken wire.
Some people use cardboard boxes, they will work but only for 1 day and
must be disposed of after that and replaced - it is very
labor-intensive and you should always have some sort of water-barrier
under the box, such as a trash bag or shower curtain. You also must be
very cautious as another element you need for hatchlings is a heat lamp
- a heat lamp too close to a cardboard box can be a recipe for disaster
and can cause a deadly fire!
Keep in mind what type of birds your are brooding when selecting a
brooder: button quail are very tiny and can squiggle out of almost
anything. Quail and pheasants start to flutter at less than 1 week and
a top is needed to protect them and prevent their escape from your safe
zone for them.
Brooder floor: We
highly recommend the rubbery shelf-liner (the kind with holes in it)
for positive-grip footing for the babies, it can be thrown away or
washed up and disinfected for reuse - your preference. We do NOT
recommend wood chips of any kind or newspaper, as newspaper ink is
poisonous and newspaper causes foot problems. Cedar shavings are
poisonous to birds! Paper towels may be used, I have heard many people
swear by using an old bath towel in the brooder floor although I
personally wouldn’t want to launder it.
Heat Lamp(s)/Thermometer:
You will want to keep the brooder area a steady temperature of 95-100
degrees F for the 1st week of your hatchlings’ lives, and lessen
the temperature by 5 degrees every week until they are at room
temperature. Keep in mind that a heat lamp by night may be necessary
for a longer period of time if the area they are in is subject to
temperature drops overnight. You can vary the temperature by changing
the wattage of the bulb or by making the light higher or lower. A
thermometer is essential to making sure that your chicks stay warm
enough, but not too warm. Remember to check the cord on your heat lamp
- retire a lamp with a worn cord. Make sure that the heat lamp cannot
fall or slip and touch the floor of the brooder or sides of a cardboard
box, or you could be headed for disaster. Two heat lamps (with smaller
wattage bulbs) may be a better option, so if a bulb burns out, your
chicks won’t get too cold. Extra heat lamp bulbs in varying
wattages are an essential to keeping your chicks safe and cozy.
IMPORTANT WARNING: Never use a
bulb more than 60 watts if your socket base is PLASTIC, or a fire could
occur because those type of sockets are electrically unsafe for higher
wattage bulbs!
Your heat lamp should be placed so that the chicks can warm under it if
they are cold, and they can get out from under it should they become to
warm. How to tell? If the birds are huddled in a clump under the light,
they are too cold. If they are huddled in the corners of the brooder,
they are too hot. Also look for signs of the birds panting when they
are too warm.
WATER: Water is
another essential element for the brooder area, as it is the most
important commodity your birds need for life! Baby chicks will
sometimes pile in a waterer, use one specifically for chicks. For every
chick except button quail, we like to use the red plastic bases for a
quart waterer, designed as quail chick waterers by Little Giant. If
floor space is an issue or you are using a wire brooder, you may prefer
a pop-bottle waterer base. For young hatchlings, you can use marbles in
the base for the pop bottle waterer or for other larger styles of chick
waterers. Make sure the birds have fresh, clean water available at ALL
times, it should be lukewarm, never cold or straight from the tap as it
can chill the babies. Disinfect your waterer each time you refill it,
we prefer TekTrol as disinfectant, far better than Bleach or Lysol and
at a fraction of the cost. (Valley Vet carries this product at the best
price we’ve seen.) Also a note, avoid placing the water right
beneath the heat lamp or in a corner. Water plus heat equals bacteria
growth. Birds will pile in corners, and if they pile in water, the
results can be heartbreaking and disasterous.
FEED: Feed and feeders
are another vital aspect of chick care. For the first day or two, I
prefer to scatter feed on the floor of the brooder to make it easiest
for the birds to find. Don’t pile too much though, the birds can
injure their legs trying to run through a heap of feed. Commercially
available chick feeders can be used after a few days, or when the birds
are tall enough to eat from them and not so small that they can crawl
inside of them and become trapped. Again, make sure that your feeders
and all other equipment is disinfected regularly!!
Choosing the RIGHT feed:
do not use medicated feed; if you pump the birds full of antibiotics
you can create strains of mega-disease that will be antibiotic
resistant, you can lose all your birds rapidly when this happens! The
higher the protein you can find in a non-medicated starter crumble, the
better - especially if you are raising turkeys, Jersey Giants or other
large breeds of chickens, Giant quail of any type, or other birds where
you specifically want them to grow to their maximum size potential. If
you cannot find reasonable feed locally, we will ship our own
professionally milled custom-recipe feed to you. It is 26% protein in a
starter crumble, a sample box (14 ounces) is $11.99; 13+ lbs (usually
runs closer to 14 lbs) runs $17.99 and 21+ lbs is $24.99. All prices
include insurance and Priority Mail Shipping with Delivery
Confirmation. Click on Choosing the RIGHT feed above to view more info
about our feed. We think it is the BEST!
Remember that you should NEVER eat or offer for sale any meat from
birds who have been medicated or eating eggs from birds that have been
medicated. Read the schedule on your antibiotic or feed bag for more
information as to how long those chemicals take to get out of your
birds. Also another last note, antibiotics in your feed for breeders
DOES lessen fertility....not everyone knows this, but it is very
important.
TLC - Yes, good
old-fashioned tender loving care. Your chicks should be checked on a
minimum of twice a day, especially during the first week or two.
Three-four times a day is better. Make sure that your birds always have
access to fresh, clean water; fresh, clean food; and check to see that
the birds are comfortable temeprature-wise.
TROUBLESHOOTING:
Do not overcrowd your birds. They can become more disease-prone, not
grow within reasonable time frames, become irritable and turn to
cannibalism, etc. Our standard brooders are 24x30 and for the 1st week,
we put no more than 50 quail, 40 pheasant or guinea, 30 chicken or 20
turkey in each brooder. On day 8, they get divided by twos, to have 25
quail, 20 pheasant or guinea, 15 chicken or 10 turkeys and accordingly
they get split into smaller groups or get larger areas as they grow!
WHEN IN DOUBT, DISINFECT!!
Whenever possible, disinfect everything! Wash your own hands
before/after handling your babies (or incubator), disinfect all of your
equipment at least once a week, before and after each use, and whenever
it appears dirty in between.
If you DO need an antibiotic....we recommend Sulmet for coccidiosis in
baby chicks, it is easy to measure and use (only mix up what you will
use within 24 hours, double your disinfecting schedule....) and keep
some on hand BEFORE you see any problems so that you can catch it in
time! Sulmet can be purchased from Cutler Supply, one of our own
favorite suppliers, and they are so nice to deal with and helpful as
can be, too.
May you always be able to count your chicks before they hatch.
This article also appeared as a Buyer's Guide in eBay under my user name, c-m-r-otter.
I hope to update soon with some PICTURES!!!
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