Integrating: A Pictorial Guide by BigBlueHen53

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Successful Integration
So. You have an existing flock of adult chickens, and a secondary flock of younger birds, possibly chicks, and you're wondering: how do I turn these two groups into one cohesive unit, without anyone getting hurt?

Relax, it's doable, and not at all difficult. The tried-and-true method most recommended around here is called the See-No-Touch method, and I'm going to show you how I used it to integrate a flock of 15 beautiful 7-8 week old lavender EE (Easter Egger) chicks into my 20 mixed OG (Old Guard) hens with absolutely no fuss and no drama. With lots of pictures.

Before I start, though, I want to recommend a great article in this section titled https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/integrating-chickens-step-by-step.72815/. It explains the method thoroughly. Ready? Here we go.

Now, your setup may be different from mine. But the key element in this method is that both groups of chickens need to be able to see each other, preferably with only fencing separating them. In fact, almost all their senses should be engaged except touch. They should be able to see, hear, and smell each other practically all the time, from about the time the chicks are three weeks old until you are ready to join the groups together, when the chicks are anywhere from five to eight weeks of age. I do it at about eight weeks. We moved our chicks to an outside brooder when they were three weeks old (and became too stinky to keep in the house!). The brooder is inside a pen made of chain-link panels lined with hardware cloth up to about two feet high. We have dogs, so predators are not a problem.

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Yup, that Rubbermaid storage unit is the brooder. Er, the fence is actually level. The camera was not. The top of the brooder slides back during the day to provide ventilation; when it rains we pull it forward but of course the front stays open. Mostly the chicks spend their days outside in the chain link pen and are securely locked in at night.

The older flock sleeps at night in the vine-covered 8x10 coop you can barely see in the background, and spends its days in a very large run to the left for part of the day. Later, the gates are opened and they free-range on about three acres. Their area completely surrounds the chicks' pen.

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A couple of the OG hens are in shadow on the left, looking in at the lavender chicks.

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And that's Rojo el Magnifico, the rooster, outside the chicks' pen, checking out the youngsters. I didn't name him, he named himself. Obviously, he has a very high opinion of himself.

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The lavender chicks, at six weeks, are separated from the OGs only by this chicken wire gate. In another week or so, I'll open this gate and they'll be one, big, happy family. The only reason I haven't already done it at this point is because I still have some chick feed remaining. I'm gradually switching the chicks over to an all-flock formula, but I don't want to give the older girls access to the mixed feed. Why? Because they LOVE the chick starter, that's why; they're gluttons for it. They'll gobble it all down and crowd the chicks away from their feeder. So integration will just have to wait a little bit longer.

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At almost 8 weeks old, look how big my babies are! They're practically grown-up chickens. They've just finished a five-day course of Corid and are ready to join the big birds. Today's the Big Day!

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The gate is finally open! And the OG hens have wasted no time coming in to check out the goodies at the children's table. Nothing to see here, ladies, they're serving the same menu here as you have in your own feeder, so move along! Let's see how things are progressing in the Big Girls' section.

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Well, will you look at that! The junior staff is hanging out at the office water cooler with Senior Admin like old friends. Babies mostly on the left, two OG on the right, with one chick in the middle. Everyone looks perfectly comfortable together. They don't even realize they're wing-to-wing with each other, in closer proximity than they've ever been before. It's just not that big of a difference.

And there you have it, folks. Easy peasy. The chicks will follow the OG out into the big wide world to see where to find the best bugs and dust baths; Rojo will show them what a big back yard they have to explore, and the dogs will keep an eye out for predators. Oh, I knew I forgot something! The dogs.

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Here's Jenny overseeing snack time ...

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.... and Sammy (aka Greedyguts), making sure he gets his share of the mealworms.

I hope you've enjoyed this journey through the joys of integrating. See, it's not scary at all! You can certainly do this. Enjoy your flocks, folks!
About author
BigBlueHen53
Hi! I now live in SE Missouri, the Show-Me state, and have since 2010 when I married my very lucky and wonderful husband, who fortunately seems to like critters as much as I do! So we have 2 or 3 dogs, 2 cats and 20 or so chickens on 10 acres. Before that .. I've lived everywhere, man! Taught basic dog obedience in NW NM for close to 20 years, I'm real proud of that! Happy to be here now.

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Nice article…easy read, easy to understand
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BigBlueHen53
BigBlueHen53
Thanks, Muddy!
Really enjoyed the article, (read it cause I was bored) and I’ve done multiple integratings. I do have a suggestion that you could a section for if you have a mean flock, because chickens can be extremely mean to newcomers, like mine were when I introduced them to my chicks, that they have been around for weeks, the hens tried to eat the poor chicks, even when they were 8 weeks old! And our hens have hatched multiple clutches and been fine with them.
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BigBlueHen53
BigBlueHen53
Thank you for your comments. I really cannot address that issue as I've never encountered it but since you have perhaps you could write an article addressing it.
Entertaining and useful article.
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BigBlueHen53
BigBlueHen53
Thank you! ❤️

Comments

You did great! I did it pretty much the same way..only with less property. I had the large pen area with a closed in baby part at the end of the run. Same age release too. So many beginners are going to love this explanation and photos. :)
Love your dogs. You know I'm a Golden Retriever lover.
 
You did great! I did it pretty much the same way..only with less property. I had the large pen area with a closed in baby part at the end of the run. Same age release too. So many beginners are going to love this explanation and photos. :)
Love your dogs. You know I'm a Golden Retriever lover.
Thanks, Cynthia! I'm glad you enjoyed this. Yes, there are many ways people can adapt this technique to fit their situations, as long as they give their birds the chance to socialize safely for a few weeks first. And yes, we have that in common, but then, what's not to love about Goldens? (Besides the hair, but we can forgive them for that!)
 
Thank you for this article! I’ve learned so much from this group that I never knew I was doing wrong. May I ask why you give 8week old chicks Corid before integrating bc I’m about to integrate my 8week olds and wondering if I need to do this too? I’ve got an established 6 year flock but got 10 new babies (sapphire gems, lavender orps and 2 jersey giants). Just want to make sure they’re healthy and safe before doing the steps you provided ..which I’m so thankful for. :)
 
Thank you for this article! I’ve learned so much from this group that I never knew I was doing wrong. May I ask why you give 8week old chicks Corid before integrating bc I’m about to integrate my 8week olds and wondering if I need to do this too? I’ve got an established 6 year flock but got 10 new babies (sapphire gems, lavender orps and 2 jersey giants). Just want to make sure they’re healthy and safe before doing the steps you provided ..which I’m so thankful for. :)
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it. I don't normally give my chicks Corid before integrating, but in this particular case I noticed some bloody poops, so I did. This little pen had been used for some CornishX chicks a few months previously and then had been soaked with rain before this particular batch of chicks used it, so I thought, "better safe than sorry!" This was actually the first time I'd ever seen bloody poops on my property, so I treated everybody. I had also wormed the older chickens for roundworms prior to adding the younger chicks. You just have to pay attention and treat problems as they come up.
 
Well i kind of had this idea but not enough space and the weather is not cooperating next week. Im guessing i continue with chicks penned while adults are active nearby, and then let chicks explore after old ladies go to roost. I should probably worm the old birds too
 
Well i kind of had this idea but not enough space and the weather is not cooperating next week. Im guessing i continue with chicks penned while adults are active nearby, and then let chicks explore after old ladies go to roost. I should probably worm the old birds too
Try again when the chicks are bigger? Often integration is smoother when the chicks reach laying age and are not so small and vulnerable.
 
This is helpful, Thank you! How about temperatures? We are looking to move them out at 5 weeks to begin the integration process…. It has been going down to 25 at night. The coop is closed up but should we keep a heat light for the littles?
 
Doing something in the same ballpark—but with a twist. My three RIR divas have officially decided they’re indoor chickens now obessed with going for walks, their coop- but demanding to follow me inside. Today was the final straw: they were relentlessly pecking at the door like little feathered debt collectors.

So I cracked the door open just a smidge to shoo them away as I dont want them eating my bromides and orchids—and BAM! They bum-rushed me like it was Black Friday and the sofa was on sale.

The peeps (just a few days old, tiny and pure) were in their brooder while I was mid-cleaning. Cue chaos.

Isla, my sweet favorite, daintily hops onto the brooder edge like she's supervising. Iris launches herself onto my shoulder like a pirate's parrot, and Indigo makes a beeline for the sofa for a front row seat.

I called out, “Three I’s! Let’s go!” (Yes, we call them that because their names all start with I… very alphabet chic). And they actually listened! They all dashed out the door with me- and jumped on TOP of their kennel (what they lived half of their lives thus far in- before full time coop residents). Apparently, they wanted front-row seats to the baby peep show.

So, I opened the door to said kennel- and they dashed in. Here we are. I gave in. They’re now having a full-on viewing party: few kinds of microgreens, fruit (I dunno- I threw in all sorts), a bit of bread, little salmon and chicken scratch like it’s a five-star buffet. I’ll let them hang out like this for a couple hours a day. No skin off my back—those peeps are tiny celebrities, and everyone needs to learn to coexist… eventually. But with such a small flock, I get get away with simplicity.


I made this video for my hubby who is out of town and wont believe what he is coming home too! haha!

... Once the chicks are out of the brooder (and I have a couple more eggs to hatch)- and move to the kennel. They can share a joining wall outside for a few hours a day- between the coop and kennel. Until they go free range. I know I take things slow- and I am a perfectionist, but that is because I came from raising more complex species in the past.
 
This is helpful, Thank you! How about temperatures? We are looking to move them out at 5 weeks to begin the integration process…. It has been going down to 25 at night. The coop is closed up but should we keep a heat light for the littles?
I wouldn't think one is necessary. At 5 weeks they are fully feathered and they will huddle together for warmth. Remember they are BIRDS, and IMO if sparrows, cardinals and blue jays can survive those temps, so can chickens as long as they do not get wet or have wind blowing on them. I'm glad you found my article helpful!
 
Doing something in the same ballpark—but with a twist. My three RIR divas have officially decided they’re indoor chickens now obessed with going for walks, their coop- but demanding to follow me inside. Today was the final straw: they were relentlessly pecking at the door like little feathered debt collectors.

So I cracked the door open just a smidge to shoo them away as I dont want them eating my bromides and orchids—and BAM! They bum-rushed me like it was Black Friday and the sofa was on sale.

The peeps (just a few days old, tiny and pure) were in their brooder while I was mid-cleaning. Cue chaos.

Isla, my sweet favorite, daintily hops onto the brooder edge like she's supervising. Iris launches herself onto my shoulder like a pirate's parrot, and Indigo makes a beeline for the sofa for a front row seat.

I called out, “Three I’s! Let’s go!” (Yes, we call them that because their names all start with I… very alphabet chic). And they actually listened! They all dashed out the door with me- and jumped on TOP of their kennel (what they lived half of their lives thus far in- before full time coop residents). Apparently, they wanted front-row seats to the baby peep show.

So, I opened the door to said kennel- and they dashed in. Here we are. I gave in. They’re now having a full-on viewing party: few kinds of microgreens, fruit (I dunno- I threw in all sorts), a bit of bread, little salmon and chicken scratch like it’s a five-star buffet. I’ll let them hang out like this for a couple hours a day. No skin off my back—those peeps are tiny celebrities, and everyone needs to learn to coexist… eventually. But with such a small flock, I get get away with simplicity.


I made this video for my hubby who is out of town and wont believe what he is coming home too! haha!

... Once the chicks are out of the brooder (and I have a couple more eggs to hatch)- and move to the kennel. They can share a joining wall outside for a few hours a day- between the coop and kennel. Until they go free range. I know I take things slow- and I am a perfectionist, but that is because I came from raising more complex species in the past.
Always an adventure with these guys, isn't it?
 

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