
Raise Chicks this Spring
April 4

How it works:
- Chicks go on Sale February 1, 2025. Purchase your 4 chicks and specify your pick up day April 4-19, 2025. They sell out quickly! Add-on a care kit if don’t have one.
- Decide where you would like to keep the chicks, laundry room, bathroom, mud room, and set up a box to be their home. (Tips below)
- April 4-19: The Farm Market will be open for you to pick up your four baby chicks & a bag of starter food for their first week.
- Join us for a Chick Raising Class at 11am for beginning chick program participants or those looking to brush up on their skills, or just visit with our Farmers.
- Have fun raising them in your home until their feathers come in and they are big enough to go outside and run around in about 8 weeks. Then move them to your chicken coop. If you don’t plan to keep the chicks, simply bring them back to the farm to join of flock of egg layers anytime from in a few days to few weeks.
Pricing:
- 4 chicks & a week’s supply of food for $49.99 plus tax & fees.
- Add on an extra bag of feed if you plan to keep the chicks a few weeks.
- Never raised chicks before and need the equipment? Add on an equipment package when you purchase your chicks. The equipment package includes a round 8-hole feeder, a Mason jar with poultry water dish, and a heat mat to keep your chicks at a healthy temperature.
Chick Details:
We offer a mixed run of layers so you can raise different varieties. Here is a wonderful resource to identify the breeds of your chicks via Meyer Hatchery.
If you would like information straight from the chick hatchery on raising chickens, visit this link. These little ladies should be laying by October when they are 6+ months of age.
Chick Raising Tips:
So, you have some cute little fuzzballs… what now? The main things to attend to for the first 60 days:
- housing
- temperature
- food and water
- cleanliness
Chicks should be kept indoors (or in a heated brooder) until they have their feathers, about 5-8 weeks.
Brooders
The chicks’ first home is called a “brooder.” For one-time or once-in-a-while use, a cardboard box works just fine. A cage suitable for a rabbit or guinea pig is terrific and easy to clean. Some people even use an aquarium! The bottom should have a layer of clean litter (such as wood shavings) or newspaper.
Newspaper print ink can get the chicks dirty though, so we’ve never used it, and it can also be slippery. The litter should be changed out every couple of days and never allowed to remain damp – cleanliness is VERY important at this stage. Baby chicks are prone to a number of diseases, most of which can be avoided with proper sanitation.
The size of the brooder depends on how many chicks you have – the chicks should have enough room to move around, and to lie down and sleep. You need enough space for a waterer and a feeder (see below).
When the chicks are a month old, add a low roost – a stick or piece of wood dowelling about 4″ off the floor of the brooder. The chicks will jump on it and may even begin sleeping there. Don’t put the roost directly under the light, it will be too hot.
Temperature
The brooder can be heated by using a light bulb with a reflector, available at any hardware store. A 100-
watt bulb is usually fine, though some people use an actual heat lamp. The temperature should be 90-100 degrees for the first week or so; then it can be reduced by 5 degrees each week thereafter, until the chicks have their feathers (5-8 weeks old). A thermometer in the brooder is helpful, but you can tell if the temperature is right by how the chicks behave. If they are panting and/or huddling in corners farthest from the light, they are too hot. If they huddle together in a ball under the light, they are too cold. You can adjust the distance of the light (or change the wattage of the bulb) until it’s right.
Water
Clean, fresh water must ALWAYS be available to your chicks. Get at least a medium size waterer – chicks drink a LOT of water. We like this plastic kind, it’s easy to clean, inexpensive, lightweight, and they can’t tip it over. They also poop everywhere including right into their water; clean the waterer at least once a day (depending on how crowded it is, even twice a day).
Feeders and Feeding
Even baby chicks will naturally scratch at their food, so a feeder that (more or less) keeps the food in one place is good. The feeder shown is a popular design made of galvanized steel; the top slides off to clean and fill it. Again, cleanliness is important; the chicks will poop right into their own food, so you must clean and refill it often.
Chicks start out with food called “crumbles”. It is specially formulated for their dietary needs; it comes both medicated and not. We know people that use both kinds. If you don’t use medicated feed, you run the risk that Coccidiosis will infect and wipe out many of your chicks. If you choose non-medicated feed, pay more attention to cleanliness.
The feed is a complete food – no other food is necessary. However, feeding your chicks treats can be fun. After the first week or two, you can give them a worm or a bug or two from your garden to play with and eat. Greens are not recommended because they can cause diarrhea-like symptoms. When droppings are loose, a condition may develop called “pasting up,’ where droppings stick to the vent area and cease to drop. Check the chicks for pasting often – if you see it, clean off the vent area (you can use a moist towel or even some mineral oil).
Play Time
Chicks are insatiably curious – after the first week or two, they can be put outside for short periods of time if the temperature is warm. They MUST be watched at this age, however. Chicks can move fast, squeeze into small spaces, and are helpless against a variety of predators, including the family dog or cat. If they have bonded to you (the first large thing a baby chicks sees is forever its mama), they will follow you around. Chickens become fond of their owners; some will come when you call them (and some won’t).