Heat lamps make me nervous, they always have. Every year, news stories recount tales of homes and chicken coops burning down as a result of a heat lamp. Whether from falling, being knocked over or simply swinging into contact with a flammable object, the traditional heat lamp is just plain hazardous even when vigilantly employed. Regardless of how carefully it is hung or how many different ways it is tethered, I never get past that gnawing feeling that something beyond my control could result in catastrophe.

The fire in the photo below resulted from a heat lamp that fell.  There were 2 goats, 3 goslings, 3 ducklings and approximately 13 chicks in the area of the heat lamp who would have perished if the chicken-keeper hadn’t come upon the scene when she did.

Heat lamp reflectors, ordinarily made of aluminum, commonly include a hangar and a clamp. The problem with the design is that there are several points at which its parts can fail from the clamp to the wire hangar and the wing nut that connects the clamp to the lamp.

Meet the original baby chick warmer: the hen. A chicken’s normal body temperature ranges between 103°-107° F.  Observing mama hens interact with their babies in my backyard has completely convinced me that chicks simply do not need as much heat as we are led to believe. In this photo, my Silkie surrogate mama, Freida, took her 3 week old chicks out for a romp in the run in 29°F  temperatures.

We are all taught ‘The Formula” for brooding baby chicks: 90-95° Fahrenheit for the first week of life, decreasing by five degrees each week thereafter.  If I were a slave to The Formula, I would have called CPS (chick protective services) and reported Freida immediately, after whisking the chicks indoors to toast under a an 80° french-fry lamp, of course. But I am no longer a slave to the formula and Freida never has been.When her chicks got chilly, they simply scurried underneath her.

Until fairly recently, there weren’t too many options for keeping baby chicks warm. I wish I had known earlier in my chicken-keeping experience that Brinsea Products offers the EcoGlow Brooder, which employs the same concept as a mama hen. Just as with a hen, the chicks will spend most of their time under the EcoGlow for the first couple of days, they’ll peek out from underneath occasionally, gradually spending more and more time away from it. They will scoot around to eat, drink and play chick games, and return when necessary. Before too long, and much sooner than you’d expect, they spend most of their time away from the brooder.

The EcoGlow operates on the principle of radiant heat, which passes through air without warming it. Only a solid object will absorb and be warmed by radiant heat, so don’t expect to put your hand underneath it briefly and determine whether or not it is warm enough for the chicks. A thermometer will measure the air temperature but not the radiant heat and will usually show 5° to 10°F lower than the temperature felt by the chicks.

In my experience the advantages of the EcoGlow over a heat lamp are:

  • it’s more like mama hen, chicks snuggle up to the unit when they feel it necessary
  • no fire hazard
  • uses less electricity (14 watts vs. 250 watts with a heat lamp)
  • no risk of pasty butt from overheating
  • no disruptive light, allowing for natural, diurnal wake/sleep cycles
  • height adjustable for growing chicks
  • no fussy machinations required to hang the heat source, making brooder location more flexible
This Polish Crested chick was hunkered down for the night. I imagine this is the chick equivalent of leaving one leg out of the bed at night

A sheet of Contact paper applied to the top makes clean-up a breeze. The top of the EcoGlow can be slippery with or without Contact paper, I use rubber shelf liner on top of the EcoGlow to avoid risk of spraddle leg in my chicks. When the chicks no longer use the EcoGlow, peel off the shelf liner and Contact paper. No scrubbing required!

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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Heat lamps make me nervous, they always have. Every year, news stories recount tales of homes and chicken coops burning down as a result of a heat lamp. Whether from falling, being knocked over or simply swinging into contact with a flammable object, the traditional heat lamp is just plain hazardous even when vigilantly employed. Regardless of how carefully it is hung or how many different ways it is tethered, I never get past that gnawing feeling that something beyond my control could result in catastrophe.

The fire in the photo below resulted from a heat lamp that fell.  There were 2 goats, 3 goslings, 3 ducklings and approximately 13 chicks in the area of the heat lamp who would have perished if the chicken-keeper hadn’t come upon the scene when she did.

Heat lamp reflectors, ordinarily made of aluminum, commonly include a hangar and a clamp. The problem with the design is that there are several points at which its parts can fail from the clamp to the wire hangar and the wing nut that connects the clamp to the lamp.

Meet the original baby chick warmer: the hen. A chicken’s normal body temperature ranges between 103°-107° F.  Observing mama hens interact with their babies in my backyard has completely convinced me that chicks simply do not need as much heat as we are led to believe. In this photo, my Silkie surrogate mama, Freida, took her 3 week old chicks out for a romp in the run in 29°F  temperatures.

We are all taught ‘The Formula” for brooding baby chicks: 90-95° Fahrenheit for the first week of life, decreasing by five degrees each week thereafter.  If I were a slave to The Formula, I would have called CPS (chick protective services) and reported Freida immediately, after whisking the chicks indoors to toast under a an 80° french-fry lamp, of course. But I am no longer a slave to the formula and Freida never has been.When her chicks got chilly, they simply scurried underneath her.

Until fairly recently, there weren’t too many options for keeping baby chicks warm. I wish I had known earlier in my chicken-keeping experience that Brinsea Products offers the EcoGlow Brooder, which employs the same concept as a mama hen. Just as with a hen, the chicks will spend most of their time under the EcoGlow for the first couple of days, they’ll peek out from underneath occasionally, gradually spending more and more time away from it. They will scoot around to eat, drink and play chick games, and return when necessary. Before too long, and much sooner than you’d expect, they spend most of their time away from the brooder.

The EcoGlow operates on the principle of radiant heat, which passes through air without warming it. Only a solid object will absorb and be warmed by radiant heat, so don’t expect to put your hand underneath it briefly and determine whether or not it is warm enough for the chicks. A thermometer will measure the air temperature but not the radiant heat and will usually show 5° to 10°F lower than the temperature felt by the chicks.

In my experience the advantages of the EcoGlow over a heat lamp are:

  • it’s more like mama hen, chicks snuggle up to the unit when they feel it necessary
  • no fire hazard
  • uses less electricity (14 watts vs. 250 watts with a heat lamp)
  • no risk of pasty butt from overheating
  • no disruptive light, allowing for natural, diurnal wake/sleep cycles
  • height adjustable for growing chicks
  • no fussy machinations required to hang the heat source, making brooder location more flexible
This Polish Crested chick was hunkered down for the night. I imagine this is the chick equivalent of leaving one leg out of the bed at night

A sheet of Contact paper applied to the top makes clean-up a breeze. The top of the EcoGlow can be slippery with or without Contact paper, I use rubber shelf liner on top of the EcoGlow to avoid risk of spraddle leg in my chicks. When the chicks no longer use the EcoGlow, peel off the shelf liner and Contact paper. No scrubbing required!

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Chris N Maranda Allen
11 years ago

I subscribed to your page via email, I liked Brinsea on FB.  I would SO love to win this ;)  

Dan and Renee Johnson
11 years ago

My daughter would love this. She's hatching out her first batch! She's so excited.

Dina Dalzell Falasco
11 years ago

Tomorrow is my Birthday!!  I think I'm going to win!

Kara Cunningham
11 years ago

Thanks for all the chicken related info and fun!  Plus the contest, I never win, but it's fun to dream about winning :)  Would love to incubate a few Wellies and BCS's this spring, so this would be handy as we only have a light

Ronda Roxbury
Ronda Roxbury
11 years ago

I have never seen anything like this…my boys and I get a new batch of day olds from the hatchry near by every other year…..I am guilty of using the silver aluminum dome clip light bulb for heat…not any more. I need this heater for spring and plan to get one.

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