I have a hen that I've tried breaking 3/4 times now. I have a cage with wire bottom etc put her in for few days to a week then let her back with others, shes ok for couple day then goes back to sitting!
Any ideas?? Leave her longer in cage? I just feel bad leaving her in there so long she is a bantam cross around 8 months.
There are often small but vital bits of information that many people who post on discouraging a broody hen assume people know.
I tried to help someone local discourage a broody hen and given he had a dog crate I advised the dog crate method. He put the dog crate in the coop, on the floor and worse still, in sight of the nesting box where other hens came and went to lay eggs. You could see the broody hen in the dog crate looking at the eggs the other hens laid and you just knew she was thinking as soon as I get out of this ******* cage I’m going to sit on those eggs!
The wire cage needs to be out of sight of the coop ideally.
It needs to be off the ground. It’s the free passage of air under the broody hen that cools her breast down; no cooling, no stop brooding.
Put the cage on blocks so air can move under the cage.
As long as the hen can find eggs when she comes out of the cage she’s more likely to try and sit on them. Remove all eggs when you let the broody hen out.
I don’t use a wire crate. I think they are unnecessary most of the time.
Usually I’ve found with free ranging hens, once you take the eggs away they may sit for the rest of the day n the straw, or whatever, and at night I pick them up and put them on the perch with the others. It’s rare, but occasionally I get one come back the next day and try to sit again. I strip the egg box out so there is nothing in it. This has worked 90% of the time.
One other method I’ve not seen mentioned is to make a temporary egg box, put the broody hens eggs in it and let her sit. I let them sit for up to 4 days. This ensures that their egg laying controller switches off so they don’t just sit and lay more eggs. After 4 days I take the eggs away and remove the temporary egg box. This seems to work.
When all else fails I bring the broody hen into the house and put her in one of those kiddy cages used for toddlers. This needs to go on a tiled, or concrete floor; they’re cool if the hen sits.
At night I put the hen back on her perch in the coop and the next morning I collect her and put her back in the toddlers cage. The longest I’ve had to do this for is three days.