BREEDING FOR PRODUCTION...EGGS AND OR MEAT.

You might think about selling the hen you don't like....some folks will pay well for a hen that is a true broody. Or you could keep her. I'm pretty well situated if the power grid goes down for a protracted period of time but I still keep a few good broodies around, despite their being major pains in the butt sometimes. A farmer without jeans, long sleeves and good gloves is liable to get flogged or pecked once in a while...
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A broody hen can become a nuisance, especially if you're not in the mood or need for one at a particular time but consider my situation. I have a three hundred pound + buck goat that thinks he's in love with me and every chance he get, he tries to take our relationship to another level. He doesn't even like Jason or Ariel so they are 'elected' to care for all his needs. I do really like this big fella and he cuts the mustard with the gals but I refuse to be part of his kinky fantasies.

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OMG! That is so dang funny!!!
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Well....when you got it, you just got it!

The only reason I'm considering culling her is because I have so many good broodies to work with. All three of my White Rocks, two of my NNs, and at least one of my other Dorking mixes (a much nicer one). This particular bird, Sierra, has always been flighty, irritable and annoying to me. She's the only bird I have that's persistently intent on escaping her run and even the entire back yard, and then runs the length of the fence line screaming to get back in. Of all of my birds she's probably the one most inclined to surviving int he wild, but she's smaller than what I prefer and lays really small eggs when she lays. The only reason I kept her and two of her sisters was to see if they'd be good layers as having cream/white colored eggs would add a little more variation to what I sell. (I butchered all of the male Dorking mixes long ago. They were delicious!) I'm still trying to decide what I want to do with her so for now I'll probably put her in the dog kennel for a day or so to try to break her broodiness since I seem to have broken the other broody as of today.
 
Has anyone had a pullet/hen lay an egg from the roost? Usually my girls are very good about using their nest boxes, but I found a cracked one under the roost today while cleaning. (They can't get back there from floor level...)

- Ant Farm

This was more common among my girls when they first began laying, but from time to time it still happens. One of my Australorps did this about a month ago and kept running to me and then to her coop, over and over again, as if to tell me to come fetch her egg. Then she strutted around my legs once I'd claimed it. Luckily the bedding was thick enough beneath the roost that it didn't break, but it was covered in poop and required a lot of washing. I cleaned it up, cooked it and fed it to the dogs.

Silly chickens!
 
Thanks to everyone for explaining "broody poops" to me. I did notice that my mama hen released some pretty big poops when she was hatching, but never paid much attention to them beyond that.
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lau.gif
OMG! That is so dang funny!!!
yuckyuck.gif
Well....when you got it, you just got it!

The only reason I'm considering culling her is because I have so many good broodies to work with. All three of my White Rocks, two of my NNs, and at least one of my other Dorking mixes (a much nicer one). This particular bird, Sierra, has always been flighty, irritable and annoying to me. She's the only bird I have that's persistently intent on escaping her run and even the entire back yard, and then runs the length of the fence line screaming to get back in. Of all of my birds she's probably the one most inclined to surviving int he wild, but she's smaller than what I prefer and lays really small eggs when she lays. The only reason I kept her and two of her sisters was to see if they'd be good layers as having cream/white colored eggs would add a little more variation to what I sell. (I butchered all of the male Dorking mixes long ago. They were delicious!) I'm still trying to decide what I want to do with her so for now I'll probably put her in the dog kennel for a day or so to try to break her broodiness since I seem to have broken the other broody as of today.

Eat the thing. You seem pretty well covered for broodies.

Ariel thinks Chester (buck goat) likes me because of my cologne. I'd go along with that if I ever wore cologne. Our whole family uses the same deodorant. That Right Guard...Powder Dry must work with my pheromones to create some special love potion that drives Chester wild. I did help the vet 'collect' him last year, that might also have something to do with his aberrant behavior.
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This was more common among my girls when they first began laying, but from time to time it still happens. One of my Australorps did this about a month ago and kept running to me and then to her coop, over and over again, as if to tell me to come fetch her egg. Then she strutted around my legs once I'd claimed it. Luckily the bedding was thick enough beneath the roost that it didn't break, but it was covered in poop and required a lot of washing. I cleaned it up, cooked it and fed it to the dogs.

Silly chickens!

Thanks, everyone. It's a one off, I hope.
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Eat the thing. You seem pretty well covered for broodies.

Ariel thinks Chester (buck goat) likes me because of my cologne. I'd go along with that if I ever wore cologne. Our whole family uses the same deodorant. That Right Guard...Powder Dry must work with my pheromones to create some special love potion that drives Chester wild. I did help the vet 'collect' him last year, that might also have something to do with his aberrant behavior.
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Oh, admit it - you've been wearing that new "Axe for Goats" men's spray...

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- Ant Farm
 
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I don't know exactly what you did when you had your buck collected, don't really want to, but in the future you might want to try using a doe in heat to tease him instead.
 
@CanadianBuckeye My father had a serious broody jap bantam that hatched out his rir. If he didn't leave a nest of eggs for her to set on she would disappear and return with chicks, rir crosses. Never in the winter though.
 

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