Rancid Crbtree
Songster
- Feb 20, 2024
- 104
- 611
- 133
I belong to several chicken groups and Ive seen a pattern. I will preface this by saying, I helped raise our first flock of chickens 50 years go. We would raise between 50 and 100 birds a year. This year we are at a new location and I built a new coop and run for 24 dual purpose birds. Raising chickens is not new to me.
Like nearly all folks in these groups, I start our chicks in a brooder with a heat lamp and/or heat plate. That is where they will stay for 6 or 7 weeks until they are fully featherd and the outside temps suitable to put them in the coop.
I offer this info for the new folks, raising chickens but also for those that have raised birds for a few years so you will be aware of why it matters where your brooder is located. Perhaps you are considering placing the brooder in your home.
On our homestead, we just completed a new out building that will serve as the headquarters for my home company. This is a heated building (heated with an L.P. furnace) . This new building IS NOT yet fully operational so we used the new office space to place the brooder. The only other activity in this building was starting some seeds for the garden but that was done in another part of the building.
Our chicks stayed in that room for 40 days. The forced air furnace heats all the rooms including the assembly area, loading dock and furnace room. The cold air returns and heat vents circulate the air to the furnace (through a furnace filter) and then back to all the rooms. The chicks were placed in the office space on April 5th so it was pretty cold and the furnace ran as it should in cold weather.
In these groups I see the pattern of folks locating their brooders in their homes (either in the living room, a spare bedroom or other rooms of the house) where they live, eat, sleep, cook, etc. Knowing this, I documented the 40 days of brooding in a building with forced air/circulated heating and I offer this info and a word of caution with pictures I took of not only the one room the brooder was in (and we kept the doors closed to this room to contain the effects to just this room).
I will tell you that the effects on the furnace filter was incredible (even though the furnace room was on the other end of the building and in its own room with a door. I changed the filter after just 20 days and even that was past due. I show the filter in the images included.
If you are new to chickens and are considering brooding them in your home where you cook, eat, sleep and live and you have a forced air furnace, just know what the effects will be to the ENTIRE house. If your toaster sits out on a counter top, you will be toasting your bagel with the dust of bedding, food, feathers and feces.
Our building has only hard surfaces (no carpeting, no couches, no curtains, blinds and no pillows or beds) as the air circulates through your house, these soft surfaces will attract this dust like a magnet. The condenser of your fridge will attract this dust as will ALL electronics like TV, Laptops, etc.
You are likely a clean person and will clean the room where the chicks are brooding but know that the dust of feces, feathers, food and bedding will not be contained to just the room where the brooder resides. I fear, there is NO WAY a person could keep up with the cleaning of an entire home on a daily basis (like the tops of light fixtures and door jams, light bulbs in your lamps, etc) And most wont even think about the effects to the furnace and its filter and your duct work.
The images Ive included are from just 40 days in a brand new building occupied ONLY by 24 chicks.
Like nearly all folks in these groups, I start our chicks in a brooder with a heat lamp and/or heat plate. That is where they will stay for 6 or 7 weeks until they are fully featherd and the outside temps suitable to put them in the coop.
I offer this info for the new folks, raising chickens but also for those that have raised birds for a few years so you will be aware of why it matters where your brooder is located. Perhaps you are considering placing the brooder in your home.
On our homestead, we just completed a new out building that will serve as the headquarters for my home company. This is a heated building (heated with an L.P. furnace) . This new building IS NOT yet fully operational so we used the new office space to place the brooder. The only other activity in this building was starting some seeds for the garden but that was done in another part of the building.
Our chicks stayed in that room for 40 days. The forced air furnace heats all the rooms including the assembly area, loading dock and furnace room. The cold air returns and heat vents circulate the air to the furnace (through a furnace filter) and then back to all the rooms. The chicks were placed in the office space on April 5th so it was pretty cold and the furnace ran as it should in cold weather.
In these groups I see the pattern of folks locating their brooders in their homes (either in the living room, a spare bedroom or other rooms of the house) where they live, eat, sleep, cook, etc. Knowing this, I documented the 40 days of brooding in a building with forced air/circulated heating and I offer this info and a word of caution with pictures I took of not only the one room the brooder was in (and we kept the doors closed to this room to contain the effects to just this room).
I will tell you that the effects on the furnace filter was incredible (even though the furnace room was on the other end of the building and in its own room with a door. I changed the filter after just 20 days and even that was past due. I show the filter in the images included.
If you are new to chickens and are considering brooding them in your home where you cook, eat, sleep and live and you have a forced air furnace, just know what the effects will be to the ENTIRE house. If your toaster sits out on a counter top, you will be toasting your bagel with the dust of bedding, food, feathers and feces.
Our building has only hard surfaces (no carpeting, no couches, no curtains, blinds and no pillows or beds) as the air circulates through your house, these soft surfaces will attract this dust like a magnet. The condenser of your fridge will attract this dust as will ALL electronics like TV, Laptops, etc.
You are likely a clean person and will clean the room where the chicks are brooding but know that the dust of feces, feathers, food and bedding will not be contained to just the room where the brooder resides. I fear, there is NO WAY a person could keep up with the cleaning of an entire home on a daily basis (like the tops of light fixtures and door jams, light bulbs in your lamps, etc) And most wont even think about the effects to the furnace and its filter and your duct work.
The images Ive included are from just 40 days in a brand new building occupied ONLY by 24 chicks.