Broody hen moving her eggs?

Solanacae

Crowing
Mar 10, 2021
786
4,890
406
Cache Valley, UT
I have an 11-month hen who has been very persnickety lately. If I go out to check the next of boxes too early in the day, like before 2 or 3 in the afternoon, she’ll refuse to lay in the nesting box and will lay it on the floor of the run instead. (Because that is sooo much safer and secluded. 🙄)

With the lengthening days, all of our hens have been laying later in the day, and so perhaps that has been throwing me off on when I can go collect my eggs, but the number of eggs I’ve been finding on the floor of the run has been increasing to the point that now it’s every time she lays an egg.

I usually wait until I see that she’s out roaming around before I check on the nesting boxes, but today, she was in there for hours. I took some treats out to the rest, hoping she’d come out and have some, but no sign. So I let her be, and then went back out at 5 to find that her egg was on the run floor, cracked open and another hen eating it. She, however, was still in the nesting box and acting decidedly broody. Her comb has been paler than usual but this was the first time I found her setting. So I kicked her out and removed what was left of the egg (not much at that point).

My question is, is she trying to move her eggs somewhere? If so, how do I stop her? I usually find them at the bottom of the ladder that goes up to the coop, often with a cracked shell. (Like I said earlier, it used to be random, but it’s now been the norm for the last two weeks or so.) She gets layer feed and has free access to crushed eggshells/oyster shell, and her eggshells are a nice thickness. I have a 2”-ish lip on my nesting boxes, so nothing rolls out very easy. I do have nesting box curtains, for what that’s worth.

I’m worried that her annoying habit is going to result in me fighting an egg eating problem with the other hens. I don’t have a roo, and will be working on breaking her broodiness. Any suggestions?
 
I have a 2”-ish lip on my nesting boxes, so nothing rolls out very easy.
That might not be tall enough.
Pics of nests please.

How many birds, how many nests??

Sounds like you may have several things going on.

Are you sure she's broody?
Is she on nest most the day and all night?
When you pull her out of nest and put her on the ground, does she flatten right back out into a fluffy screeching pancake?
Does she walk around making a low cluckcluckcluckcluckcluck(ticking bomb) sound on her way back to the nest?

If so, then she is probably broody and you'll have to decide how to manage it.
 
That might not be tall enough.
Pics of nests please.

How many birds, how many nests??

Sounds like you may have several things going on.

Are you sure she's broody?
Is she on nest most the day and all night?
When you pull her out of nest and put her on the ground, does she flatten right back out into a fluffy screeching pancake?
Does she walk around making a low cluckcluckcluckcluckcluck(ticking bomb) sound on her way back to the nest?

If so, then she is probably broody and you'll have to decide how to manage it.
I’ll take some pictures this morning so you can see. There are currently 5 birds and three nests.

When I saw her in the nesting box yesterday she was very flat and spread out, so that plus her spending so much time in there yesterday makes me think she’s starting to go broody. She wasn’t screeching when I kicked her out of the nesting box, she’s not a particularly vocal chicken in general though, but she did make irritated noises when I did. I didn’t see her go back to the nesting box, she decided that getting something to eat was a better idea.

This is the first time she’s shown signs of going broody, so I’m not sure how hard she will be to break if that’s what’s going on. She did sleep on the roosting bars last night.
 
I’m apparently terrible at guessing measurements. The lip I attached is longer than my fingers. The nesting boxes are 13-14” square. I also included a pic of where the rogue eggs often show up - right in that hen-sized spot between the bottom of the ramp and the waterer. I’m wondering if I should start with moving where the waterer is so that it’s more open there. Also you can see the nesting box curtains. I got three eggs this morning, none cracked, at least they weren’t until my toddler insisted on helping put them in the carton. 🙄😆
 

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I can use less straw then, it’s plenty thick in there because I was wanting to make it an appealing, comfortable place to lay an egg. My question though, is how likely is it that she’s trying to move her eggs? Or is it more plausible that she’s just getting up out of the nesting box and laying the egg elsewhere? Would an egg survive rolling down that ramp and only be slightly cracked? I’m just thinking out loud here, trying to figure out how to stop having so many cracked eggs outside the nesting box. The coop is elevated 3-ish feet off the ground, and the ramp is over 3’ long.
 

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