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Getting ready to hatch... advice please

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  • Getting ready to hatch... advice please

    Hi. If all goes according to plan, we could have up to 12 hatchlings with us by next Wednesday. I'd like to get the run 'baby proof' before then but I'm not sure what I need to do and would appreciate any advice please.

    The broody hen is currently very happy inside a large cardboard box which is in turn inside a metal animal cage, which is inside a secure area with floor to ceiling chicken wire, inside an outbuilding with a concrete floor - so hopefully safe! Questions:

    1. I suspect the gaps in the animal cage could be large enough for new (banty) chicks to get through, so I've pushed cardboard along the edges to prevent this - is this OK?

    2. The door of the cage has a kind of lip along the bottom which I feel may cause problems as they start to move around and explore - I assume I'm safe enough removing the door so it's all at the same level?

    3. The nest itself started life with wood shavings, but has been extended by the broody dragging straw around. The rest of the cage floor is covered in straw - will new chicks be OK on straw? The floor outside the cage is concrete and I'd intended to throw straw down there too - is this a good idea or should I leave it, or use something else?

    4. I read something somewhere that said you should put food and water somewhere that early hatchers can't reach it but the hen can... not sure how I can arrange this? Unless they're assuming the hen will leave the nest to eat and drink while her eggs are hatching? It also said to put a dish of water / coffee jar lids of water out for the chicks - yes? Inside the cage presumably? And chick crumbs - will the hen also eat these, or do I continue to provide her with her normal diet?

    5. Once they're ready to go outside (after what, 2 or 3 days?), they'll have to cross a small gully in the floor which runs the length of the building along the front of their pen. I'm planning on placing a piece of wood or something across it to make a bridge - will this be safe?

    Sorry, I'm sure these are all common sense issues but I'm a bit of a worrier, especially when it's someone else's eggs/chicks at stake... Thx
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    sigpicGardening in France rocks!

  • #2
    It all looks fine to me. Just make sure that there are no holes where the chicks can get out and lost. I would mix chick crumbs with the hens food and they will find it. Put stones in a shallow dish of water to begin with so the chicks can't get in the water and drown. I wouldn't worry about bridging the gully they are very agile even when very young. Straw, well I don't know about that one but I am sure someone else does.

    Hope all goes well.
    Gardening requires a lot of water - most of it in the form of perspiration. Lou Erickson, critic and poet

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    • #3
      Thx roitlet, that's great
      sigpicGardening in France rocks!

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      • #4
        hi, lots of questions so I hope I manage to answer all. Yes, check for chick sized holes and patch up but make sure rat can't get in.
        straw harbours mites, shavings is better.
        do not tempt hen off nest for couple of days whilst chicks hatching- don't worry she will be ok. get shallow drinker for chicks or saucer with marbles in. provide chick crumb only or they might choke. hen will be just fine on chick crumb.
        if it were me, I would leave them in pen for a week before letting them out to roam. If you have cats be careful, or birds of prey- we have lost a couple to a buzzard recently.
        hope that helps.

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        • #5
          Hi Petal, thx for your advice.
          We've been monitoring the broody pen and not even a sparrow has made it through so far.. (hope I'm not tempting fate by saying that).
          I'll replace the straw in the cage with shavings then if I can, if it doesn't disturb the hen too much.
          A week suits me fine, will make lots of things easier .
          No cats, but buzzards yes, and magpies and jays etc. Will be rigging up a covered run initially, and keeping a close watch once they leave there.
          Thx again, really looking forward to it.
          sigpicGardening in France rocks!

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          • #6
            I would keep them in a covered run for weeks if you can. I'm in a suburban situation and my chicks would be taken by sparrow hawks and/or cats if not in a roofed run. They are very vulnerable!

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