Broody hen day 22

Laura53

In the Brooder
Feb 28, 2016
23
0
24
Hi everyone! Just looking for some advice if anyone has any!

We have a broody salmon faverolle sat on 11 silver laced Wyandotte bantam eggs. I rehomed her from a friend who said every summer for the past three years she's gone broody and had clay eggs to sit on, so this is the first time she's had some fertilised eggs to sit on. I haven't hatched eggs before but as far as I can see she's been amazing! Made all the right noises and puffed up her feathers like others say they should do, and other than me taking her off the nest once a day she has religiously sat on those eggs.

I candled at day 10 and 10/12 had veins. At day 14 one had a blood ring so I removed that, could see 5 with definite veins but unsure on the rest - it wasn't pitch black outside though so it was hard to see. I've just left them alone since then. From day 18 I stopped taking her off the nest as I've read, she did toilet in her nest on day 20 which I quickly picked out as it was in reach, then yesterday day 21 she stood up for a drink and I managed to get a quick look at the eggs but there's no sign of any pipping. I've read from day 18 though as soon as the mum feels movement in the eggs she goes into protection mode and won't move off that nest for anything? So it baffled me a bit that she just stood up for a drink on day 21. She has also been moving position over the past few days as well which I thought she wouldn't do if she knew they were hatching (position of the eggs for pipping etc etc). This morning I went to check on her and there was again no sign, magpies made a racket overhead and she half kind of stood up so I got a little look. It's not looking good though is it? I've read bantams tend to hatch early as well :(

I'm going to leave it till Friday which will be day 25 but my gut feeling is nothing is going to happen. Anyone experienced this and has some advice?

If nothing happens would anyone suggest buying some day old chicks and seeing if she accepts them? Obviously I would have a brooder on stand by if she didn't, but I'm 80% sure she would as she's such a lovely, laid back hen and all she's wanted for the past four years is to be a mummy! Any advice would be really appreciated, thanks in advance :)
 
@olivigus

Hi.
I usually allow my broodies to raise their chicks within the flock and there are no problems.....I have a large mixed flock with 3 roosters and they usually free range during the day. I keep the broody in a cage for 2-3 days until she gets the hang of marshalling her chicks but even when I keep them inside if the weather is bad, I have never had any problems with the other hens showing aggression and the broody normally fluffs up if anyone even shows an interest and they back off. Most of my broodies are not high on the pecking order either. The advantage of raising them within the flock is that there are no reintroduction problems. I chock the bottomless cage up on 2x4 blocks of wood after the first few days and put the chick crumb inside so that the chicks can duck underneath and access their feed and water.... they learn quickly where to go when they are hungry.

Snapped a photo of Portia tonight at bedtime with a couple of her chicks


Good luck to you both with your hatches. I've just set 2 more broodies yesterday so I will be in your position in 3 weeks time again. It doesn't seem to matter how many times you go through it, it still seems amazing that chicks hatch and like you both I still have doubts on those last few days.
Look forward to seeing more of your chicks soon.
 
Thanks. No more as yet, but she's still sitting, and I'm being patient. :)

This is the first time any of our hens has gone broody, but so far Audrey is proving to be a great mother. Like Mango--another great name by the way--she was very dedicated to her nest. I'm glad she's getting a chance to follow through on that instinct.

Fingers crossed for more cuteness by the end of the day!
 
Hi again....No nothing as high brow as that..... she's a porcelain bantam Cochin (we call them Pekins here in the UK) and since I've got a lot of chickens and I'm running short of ideas for names, Portia came from porcelain.....I'm not very imaginative I'm afraid!
My main broody is Tasha. She's an araucana cross (the equivalent of an EE in the USA I suppose but we don't call them EEs or even have a real market for them here). Anyway, she has an awesome moustache.... although technically it is probably more of a beard.... hence Tasha. She has raised 5 broods since I got her. Her first clutch was a sneaky nest she made up in the eves(she's very flighty) with 14 eggs of her own eggs in it and she hatched and raised them all, free range in my large mixed flock in a yard shared with my horses and goodness knows what other hazards like water troughs etc, let alone the risk of being stood on, without losing one! She is a total star..... she has 10 chicks at the moment, which are a week old and they spend most of the day scratching through my muck heap for bugs and making a shocking mess in the process, so I have to sweep up continually! Arrgh How could I not forgive her though! Best of all, she lays eggs all winter whilst the other girls have knocked off for moulting and raises chicks all summer when I have a glut of eggs and don't need her contribution....who could ask for more from a hen!
 
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I have had good luck introducing day olds to a hen that has been broody for three weeks. She has taken them in every time with no problem. I have just done it with my one silkie cross though so I have a small sample size. More anecdotal really.
 
I have had good luck introducing day olds to a hen that has been broody for three weeks. She has taken them in every time with no problem. I have just done it with my one silkie cross though so I have a small sample size. More anecdotal really.


Thanks for the reply! How did you introduce them? I've read doing it at night but I'd be terrified going to bed so I think I'd have to prepare myself for an all nighter sat at the coop! I saw a video on YouTube of a woman who just emptied the box of chicks in front of the mum in daylight and she just took them in. So I was considering trying it in the day then if she didn't accept them try again in the dark, what do you think?
 
I have always done it during the morning as I order by mail and pick the chicks up from to post office around 7 am.

I remove one fake egg at a time and put the chick in its place. She is so docile that she doesn't mind me reaching under her like that.
Not sure if yours would kick up a fuss. It seems that as long as she has been on the nest long enough she will accept any chick that comes her way.
 
I think you a crossing a bridge too early and she will hatch her own given a bit more time. I've had 3 years of broody hens raising chicks and whilst I have a couple that I have complete confidence in, each year there are new ones that I fuss over and worry about and convince myself none will hatch.... My latest one got to day 23 and I did a float test and saw no movement. She had been sharing broody quarters with another new broody and they had been playing musical nests and once I found both of them in one nest and these eggs cold. I put her back but when it got to day 23 and no pipping and no movement with a float test, I cracked one open, Please don't be impatient like me..... the chick was fully formed and to my horror....alive.... but the yolk sack was not absorbed and I had to cull it in the end. I put the eggs back under her and 5 more hatched although some had quit at about day 7 which presumably was when they got chilled.

Broodies moving about during those final days is not unusual and in fact sitting completely still would be detrimental for her. I do wonder if they deliberately soil the nest to increase humidity and I sometimes pour a little warm water into the sides of the nest if conditions are particularly dry towards the end of the incubation period. My mother used to cut a sod of turf, turn it over and use that for a broody nest. Our straw, hay or shavings nests must be very dry by comparison.

Anyway, I wish you luck with your hatch and please have more patience that I did last week..... I'm sure you and your broody hen will be rewarded.

Regards

Barbara

PS. Mine were bantam cochins (we call them Pekins). I've had 3 clutches of them this year so far and every one has been late whereas my large fowl have hatched on time.
 
I have always done it during the morning as I order by mail and pick the chicks up from to post office around 7 am.

I remove one fake egg at a time and put the chick in its place. She is so docile that she doesn't mind me reaching under her like that.
Not sure if yours would kick up a fuss. It seems that as long as she has been on the nest long enough she will accept any chick that comes her way.


Thanks so much, will try this is we have no luck by day 26! Mine is so docile, not aggressive in the slightest so I have every confidence in her :)


I think you a crossing a bridge too early and she will hatch her own given a bit more time. I've had 3 years of broody hens raising chicks and whilst I have a couple that I have complete confidence in, each year there are new ones that I fuss over and worry about and convince myself none will hatch.... My latest one got to day 23 and I did a float test and saw no movement. She had been sharing broody quarters with another new broody and they had been playing musical nests and once I found both of them in one nest and these eggs cold. I put her back but when it got to day 23 and no pipping and no movement with a float test, I cracked one open, Please don't be impatient like me..... the chick was fully formed and to my horror....alive.... but the yolk sack was not absorbed and I had to cull it in the end. I put the eggs back under her and 5 more hatched although some had quit at about day 7 which presumably was when they got chilled.

Broodies moving about during those final days is not unusual and in fact sitting completely still would be detrimental for her.  I do wonder if they deliberately soil the nest to increase humidity and I sometimes pour a little warm water into the sides of the nest if conditions are particularly dry towards the end of the incubation period. My mother used to cut a sod of turf, turn it over and use that for a broody nest. Our straw, hay or shavings nests must be very dry by comparison.

Anyway, I wish you luck with your hatch and please have more patience that I did last week..... I'm sure you and your broody hen will be rewarded.

Regards

Barbara

PS. Mine were bantam cochins (we call them Pekins). I've had 3 clutches of them this year so far and every one has been late whereas my large fowl have hatched on time. 


Thanks so much for this fab reply, it's exactly what I wanted to hear! Given me hope that something might happen :) sorry to hear about your experience with the little chick though, I'll wait till day 25/26 before we think about removing them.

Re them moving around - I read that in the wild they stay completely still so not to attract any attention to themselves? This could be wrong but I'm glad you've said it's normal for them to move about!

Would you recommend putting some warm water into the sides of the nest today??

Thanks again for the reply, I would be over the moon with just one little chick! She deserves it after all her hard work so I have everything crossed :)
 
It depends on your nest construction and weather conditions. If you have a warm humid climate, then I probably wouldn't. If your nest is on a stone floor in the shade, then I wouldn't. If your nest is up off the ground in a wooden box with air flow underneath and your weather is dry and breezy, then I probably would add some water. I should warn you that I've not heard of anyone else doing it. It was something that occurred to me after my first broody soiled her nest and I've done it a few times since then and it hasn't caused a problem.... I can't specifically say if it has benefitted or not, it just made sense to me that the hatching process requires a humid environment and how can broodies achieve this if they are up off the ground in a wooden box with dry matter for nesting.

I'm sure even in the wild.... although our domestic chickens are a long way removed from that.... they must shift position or ease up and stretch their legs a bit during those last few days otherwise they would lock up. I've had broodies get off the nest on hatch day and have a break and come back and everything has been fine, so I really wouldn't be too concerned about that.

Look forward to reading reports of your hatch in the next few days.

Best wishes

Barbara
 

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