Bringing home your first chickens is equal parts exciting⌠and slightly chaotic.
Youâll go from âThese babies are so cute!â to âWait⌠why is there bedding in the waterer?â in about 24 hours. đ
The good news? The first month sets the tone for your flockâs health, cleanliness, and egg-laying success. With a little preparation and a simple weekly plan, youâll feel confident fast.
Hereâs exactly what to expect â week by week.
đ Week 1: Setup & Settling In
Focus: Safety, warmth, and routine
This week is all about getting everyone comfortable.
Whether youâre starting with chicks or full-grown hens, your job is simple: create a calm, clean environment and let them adjust.
What to do:
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Set up coop or brooder before they arrive
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Add fresh, absorbent bedding
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Keep food + water available 24/7
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Check temps daily (especially for chicks)
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Minimize handling the first couple days
Pro tips:
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Place feeders/waterers slightly elevated to keep bedding out
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Expect some nervous behavior â this is normal
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Quiet observation > constant interaction
đ Think of this week as âmove-in week,â not âtraining week.â
đ Week 2: Routines & Cleanliness
Focus: Building good habits
Now that everyoneâs settled, itâs time to establish simple daily care.
Chickens thrive on consistency. A quick 10-minute routine each day prevents 90% of problems.
Daily routine:
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Refresh water
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Top off feed
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Quick poop scoop or spot clean
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Egg check (if hens are laying)
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Health glance (bright eyes, active, eating)
Weekly:
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Add fresh bedding
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Wipe feeders/waterers
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Check for damp spots or odors
Pro tips:
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Dry bedding = less smell + healthier birds
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Donât wait until the coop smells to clean
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Prevention is easier than deep cleaning later
đ Your future self will thank you for staying ahead of messes.
đ Week 3: Training & Observation
Focus: Behavior & bonding
By now, personalities start showing up â the bossy one, the shy one, the dramatic one (thereâs always one đ).
This is a great week to gently train and observe.
Work on:
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Returning to coop at dusk
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Treat training (theyâll come when called!)
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Light handling to build trust
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Watching pecking order develop
Whatâs normal:
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Minor squabbles
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Loud egg songs
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Random zoomies
Whatâs not:
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Lethargy
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Not eating
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Constant isolation
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Sneezing/coughing
đ Youâll learn more by watching them than reading any book.
đ Week 4: Optimize & Enjoy
Focus: Fine-tuning your system
Youâve officially survived the first month đ
Now itâs about making life easier for YOU.
Upgrade ideas:
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Add better bedding for odor control
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Create a simple cleaning schedule
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Store feed in sealed bins
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Add enrichment (logs, perches, dust bath areas)
Start tracking:
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Egg count
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Feed usage
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Bedding changes
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Seasonal adjustments
Most important:
Slow down and enjoy them.
Chickens are weird, funny, and wildly entertaining. This is when you start realizing⌠you didnât just buy livestock â you adopted tiny backyard comedians.
â¤ď¸ Final Thoughts
The first 30 days donât have to feel overwhelming.
Keep it simple:
Clean water
Dry bedding
Good feed
Daily checks
Everything else falls into place.
Before you know it, youâll have fresh eggs, happy hens, and a coop routine that feels second nature.
And fair warning⌠chicken math is real. You might be planning coop #2 soon. đ

