It’s amazing how quickly baby chicks grow and it can be a challenge to house them in a brooder that is large enough for them from week to week. I have used a number of different brooder types over the years from cardboard boxes to playpens, rabbit hutches and plastic tubs.
Choosing the biggest brooder possible for the age of the chick is important as overcrowding causes behavioral and health problems that are easier to avoid than to remedy. Many, creative options can work for a brooder- the set-up is limited only by the imagination. Having brooded countless batches of baby chicks, my strong preference for a housing unit is a puppy playpen, followed by the humble cardboard box.
Elements of a Highly Functional Brooder
1. Spacious (provides adequate elbow room for each occupant)
2. Safe (no fire hazard, keeps chicks inside & unwanted guests out)
3. Easy to move
4. Easy to clean or discard (eco-friendly is a bonus)
5. Inexpensive is always nice.
Extra large plastic tote brooder. This is a very impractical brooder design. Even two to three chicks outgrow it within a week.Rabbit hutch brooderChicks instinctively know to use the poultry nipple waterers from day one
Plan on 2 square feet per chick in the brooder, which may seem excessive initially, but chicks grow at an astonishing rate and it is important to have adequate space available to them in order to avoid problems that result from overcrowding such as picking and cannibalism.
Rabbit cage brooder with horse stall pellets, available inexpensively online and in feed storesCardboard brooder condo with EcoGlow Brooder for warmth
I generally brood chicks in stages, beginning inside the house, then moving to the basement or garage, then finally into a wire dog kennel inside the coop just prior to integrating the birds into the main flock. Cardboard boxes work best for me because they can be added onto as chicks grow, are easy to move, can be recycled, are free and because I use a Brinsea EcoGlow for warmth, they are infinitely safer than traditional heat lamps.
THE BETTER BROODER
Here’s how I make a chicken brooder condo that will grow with my chicks:
I start with the largest boxes available at the time and line them with puppy training pads, which water-proofs the bottom of the box.
I cut out two identically sized “windows” between the boxes.
Duct tape the boxes together at the four edges of the windows. This holds the boxes together and prevents litter from falling through the gap.
For a billion and one reasons, I use an EcoGlow Brooder, not the least of which is because heat lamps are supremely dangerous even when used properly. More about heat lamps versus this radiant heating unit here.
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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It’s amazing how quickly baby chicks grow and it can be a challenge to house them in a brooder that is large enough for them from week to week. I have used a number of different brooder types over the years from cardboard boxes to playpens, rabbit hutches and plastic tubs.
Choosing the biggest brooder possible for the age of the chick is important as overcrowding causes behavioral and health problems that are easier to avoid than to remedy. Many, creative options can work for a brooder- the set-up is limited only by the imagination. Having brooded countless batches of baby chicks, my strong preference for a housing unit is a puppy playpen, followed by the humble cardboard box.
Elements of a Highly Functional Brooder
1. Spacious (provides adequate elbow room for each occupant)
2. Safe (no fire hazard, keeps chicks inside & unwanted guests out)
3. Easy to move
4. Easy to clean or discard (eco-friendly is a bonus)
5. Inexpensive is always nice.
Extra large plastic tote brooder. This is a very impractical brooder design. Even two to three chicks outgrow it within a week.Rabbit hutch brooderChicks instinctively know to use the poultry nipple waterers from day one
Plan on 2 square feet per chick in the brooder, which may seem excessive initially, but chicks grow at an astonishing rate and it is important to have adequate space available to them in order to avoid problems that result from overcrowding such as picking and cannibalism.
Rabbit cage brooder with horse stall pellets, available inexpensively online and in feed storesCardboard brooder condo with EcoGlow Brooder for warmth
I generally brood chicks in stages, beginning inside the house, then moving to the basement or garage, then finally into a wire dog kennel inside the coop just prior to integrating the birds into the main flock. Cardboard boxes work best for me because they can be added onto as chicks grow, are easy to move, can be recycled, are free and because I use a Brinsea EcoGlow for warmth, they are infinitely safer than traditional heat lamps.
THE BETTER BROODER
Here’s how I make a chicken brooder condo that will grow with my chicks:
I start with the largest boxes available at the time and line them with puppy training pads, which water-proofs the bottom of the box.
I cut out two identically sized “windows” between the boxes.
Duct tape the boxes together at the four edges of the windows. This holds the boxes together and prevents litter from falling through the gap.
For a billion and one reasons, I use an EcoGlow Brooder, not the least of which is because heat lamps are supremely dangerous even when used properly. More about heat lamps versus this radiant heating unit here.
pine shavings in a brooder? yes or no? and if not pine shavings, what are acceptable options?
Yes, I do.
Did you use the eco glow with the dog play pen?
I recommend well water. That’s what I use for my flock too.
We have a well source for our home and it is very hard. Although, we have a filter system, I still would not feel safe if our chickens drank it. What kind of water do you recommend….ie; distilled, purified, spring? We will only have 3 chickens….well to start anyways ;)