Any ideas for making a brooder?

I also like the heating plate (check on Premier1 website, much cheaper than other sites) because it mimics the chicks sleeping under their "mama". During the day if they weren't sitting on top of it the chicks would go under it to take naps or to warm up and at night they slept under it for the most part - no peeping all night long.
 
I took video of mine when I first put them in their brooder home and then again when they were 2.5 weeks old.

I built a wire frame that fit inside the cover the heating pad comes with and it included some legs as well as being arched in shape. I repurposed some old cloth diapers to drape to the floor on 3 sides so any breeze getting in the pop door would be blocked while they're underneath. It's about 38F that first day and I have plastic stapled across the lower half of the big doorway so the wind wouldn't hit them while I was checking on them and filming. It was a little warmer when I took the second video but nowhere near the 70F I often see quoted as the minimum temperature for chicks to have an outdoor adventure. ;)

 
I would highly recommend scrapping the lights all together, the mother heating pad lets them sleep and does a much better job all the way around. sunbeam makes one that allows you to turn off the auto off feature for continuous use. here is a thread with lots of details. I've even made one for brooding meat birds, i'm never going back to heat lamps. https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...d-in-the-brooder-picture-heavy-update.956958/
Thanks, but how much does the mama heating pad cost?
 
I took video of mine when I first put them in their brooder home and then again when they were 2.5 weeks old.

I built a wire frame that fit inside the cover the heating pad comes with and it included some legs as well as being arched in shape. I repurposed some old cloth diapers to drape to the floor on 3 sides so any breeze getting in the pop door would be blocked while they're underneath. It's about 38F that first day and I have plastic stapled across the lower half of the big doorway so the wind wouldn't hit them while I was checking on them and filming. It was a little warmer when I took the second video but nowhere near the 70F I often see quoted as the minimum temperature for chicks to have an outdoor adventure. ;)

The chicks are so cute!
 

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