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Successful Brooder Management for Chicks & Poults (PPT107)

Pastured Poultry Talk

Release Date: 07/06/2020

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More Episodes

Did you know a commercial meat chicken or turkey may spend up to 40% of it's life inside a brooder? Layers, by comparison, spend approximately 5% of their first lay-cycle in the brooder.

For all our poultry species, the time in the brooder is critical to the long term health and productivity of the flock with an emphasis placed on the first three days of life. These first few days, especially for meat birds, is an important time for the bird to establish healthy eating patterns and appetites.

Brooding, especially as you scale up, is typically the most obvious weak link in a pastured poultry production system, and that's really counter-intuitive. You may think that taking care of a chicken inside a building is easy because you alleviate the most weather and predator risks of pasture. Inside the brooder, your job is to raise a young chick or poult with an immature immune system, get it the proper nutrition, keep it comfortably warm, and maintain the brooder environment amid constantly changing weather. And you do it without environment controls inside the brooder.

In this brooder environment, there's a commingling of factors that makes the brooder time challenging. In the podcast episode, I discuss the relationship between heat, ventilation, stocking density, bedding, and more.

You mess up the time in the brooder at your own risk, which is to say, this is one of the most important phases of your production that you can master, and that's why I recorded this podcast episode.

In this episode...

  • Time in the brooder by species
  • Brooder heat
    • Have a backup heat
    • Ohio Brooder
    • Rules of thumb for adjusting heat
    • Poorly feathered birds
  • Harden off the chicks before going to pasture
  • Brooder space for chicks and turkey poults
    • 1/4 sq ft per chick per week
  • Rounded corners
  • Feed and water management in the brooder
  • Bedding management and types
  • Clean, dry, and warm is the key to brooder.
  • Ventilation and drafts
  • predators in the brooder
  • A note about coccidiosis

Receiving Chicks into the Brooder

Our friends at Fertrell did a webinar training on Receiving Chicks that covers some of the same information as the podcast episode, but it also focuses heavily on those first three days of life in your care. You can't learn too much about your brooder.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvjrK8XZAKo
Alyssa Walsh from Fertrell discusses receiving chicks