If you like clean legged hens for brooding, then the Wyandotte is a good choice. Right now I have three sitting on nests and one brooding chicks. I also use a Cochin x Wyandotte as a good layer and broodie. Two of those are sitting on eggs now. And I have Cochin hens that are the hardest to break being broodie. They are fluffy incubators with featherduster legs.
All three make good mothers.
This Blue Wyandotte pullet is broodie before becoming a year old hen. She laid about 10 eggs and then claimed a nest of layer eggs. I tried to break her in a hanging cage to cool her off but she would have notheing to do with that. Gave her some pure Wyandottes. They should hatch next week. The picture on the right is a Cochin/Wyandotte sliding back into her nest of eggs which will hatch the same time.


A wyandotte can cover 8 - 10 LF eggs while a cochin can cover 10 - 18 eggs. The extra featherng makes a nice incubator.
This hen hatched 12 chicks in October and went broodie again twice before I could get her to quit long enough to condition for laying. She is in a breed pen now.


All three make good mothers.
This Blue Wyandotte pullet is broodie before becoming a year old hen. She laid about 10 eggs and then claimed a nest of layer eggs. I tried to break her in a hanging cage to cool her off but she would have notheing to do with that. Gave her some pure Wyandottes. They should hatch next week. The picture on the right is a Cochin/Wyandotte sliding back into her nest of eggs which will hatch the same time.
A wyandotte can cover 8 - 10 LF eggs while a cochin can cover 10 - 18 eggs. The extra featherng makes a nice incubator.
This hen hatched 12 chicks in October and went broodie again twice before I could get her to quit long enough to condition for laying. She is in a breed pen now.