Broody Hen Thread!

Thank you for that information. She must have buried the eggs while she got up to eat then by the time I got out there she had gathered then up and put them back under her. There is still a total of 2 eggs missing so I hope your right and they are just under her wings. I decided to enclose her big nesting box shes in just to be safe. I noticed the rooster and other hens jumping in with her.

It is also possible that the eggs which haven't returned were bad and the hen ate them... they will do that on occasion, somehow the hen senses when eggs aren't viable and rather than risk them breaking in the nest she will eat them, shell and all. Some folks may find a bit of egg yolk residue on other eggs, sometimes the egg just disappears with no viable culprit other than the broody herself.
 
Today was hatch day for me. Day 22 starts in an hr. So far I haven't seen a single chick come out. I am getting worried now. I candled on Day 12 and 11 of the 12 eggs were doing great. Wonder what may have happened in between. Shall I lift the broody and candle the eggs tonight or shall I give her another day. Candling on day 12 had me super-excited and not if I have a bad hatch/no hatch I will have to find her some chicks (which is pretty hard in Chicago).

Also, she hasn't left her nest since Monday morning. No water, and barely had some food I gave her. Shall I force her to leave the nest for a few?

Really really worried for the chicks and mom.
 
Today was hatch day for me. Day 22 starts in an hr. So far I haven't seen a single chick come out. I am getting worried now. I candled on Day 12 and 11 of the 12 eggs were doing great. Wonder what may have happened in between. Shall I lift the broody and candle the eggs tonight or shall I give her another day. Candling on day 12 had me super-excited and not if I have a bad hatch/no hatch I will have to find her some chicks (which is pretty hard in Chicago).

Also, she hasn't left her nest since Monday morning. No water, and barely had some food I gave her. Shall I force her to leave the nest for a few?

Really really worried for the chicks and mom.

I don't usually mess with a broody near hatch time, but sounds like your situation is a lot different than normal. Since it is over two days since she has been up...To preserve the hen's health I would remove her from the nest tomorrow to allow her to stretch and drink, or even do so tonight yet if you have light in your coop. I would minimize any handling of the eggs though to avoid changing their position if chicks are in process of turning themselves.
I always err on the side of the hen's health...
 
Ok... My nearly disastrous broody hens/hatching experiment ended today. Last chick hatched after spending over 24 hours attempting to do so. Neck remained twisted and after 12 hours in bator there was no change so I euthanized it. :(. There was a terrible stench in the bator and fearing an explosion I decided, after being unable to determine which egg stunk, to terminate the the remaining 9 eggs in the bator. On the way to the BSF breeder the explosion occurred...in my hands. OMG...indescribable stench...all over me. The rest went into the BSF breeder and unfortunately there were 3 viable embryos. :( Now there are 18 chicks of progressive ages in the house and all doing well. I have now successfully grafted chicks as late as 2 weeks after initial hatch. The four hens sharing mommy duty are doing a great job. It's a shame that they will be going to freezer camp when they finish raising these chicks. Thanks to all who offered advice and encouragement to a bator man, esp fisher lady, who never had a broody but had to see how it went. Learned a lot.
 
I don't usually mess with a broody near hatch time, but sounds like your situation is a lot different than normal. Since it is over two days since she has been up...To preserve the hen's health I would remove her from the nest tomorrow to allow her to stretch and drink, or even do so tonight yet if you have light in your coop. I would minimize any handling of the eggs though to avoid changing their position if chicks are in process of turning themselves.
I always err on the side of the hen's health...
ok. so I decided to take the broody out for some water and food but when I was lifting her, a chick dropped from her behind, so I had to put her right back. candled another egg which does not look like its ready for another couple of days, so don't know what to do. I'll let nature take its course. Hand fed and put water right in front of her which she drank copiously. Will hand feed and water her in the morning again. Hopefully some more will hatch overnight.
 
ok. so I decided to take the broody out for some water and food but when I was lifting her, a chick dropped from her behind, so I had to put her right back. candled another egg which does not look like its ready for another couple of days, so don't know what to do. I'll let nature take its course. Hand fed and put water right in front of her which she drank copiously. Will hand feed and water her in the morning again. Hopefully some more will hatch overnight.
I think you've discovered your best course of action...let her sit and hand feed water her a couple of times over the next couple of days.

Good luck.
Lady of McCamley
 
I think you've discovered your best course of action...let her sit and hand feed water her a couple of times over the next couple of days.

Good luck.
Lady of McCamley
I am wondering why it is taking so long though. If the other eggs do hatch it will be on day 23. Is it because she had too many eggs and she wasnt able to cover them properly? Is it because I have them on straw and not on pine shavings? or is it because she left her nest for 4 hrs on Day 6 and that may have caused some development to freeze and re-start? Many questions, will keep on wondering!

Thanks @Lady of McCamley
 
Hi Everyone! I'm new here and have a broody dilemma that I'm hoping for some advice on. My white leghorn went broody about a week ago - just a day after my only rooster (a 7-month old silkie) was killed by a coyote. The roo was my only bantam (with 5 full size hens) and although I think he was having some "success" with his hens, I don't think he'd quite worked out his moves with all of the ladies. Before his untimely end, I know that we had at least some fertilized eggs, but certainly not all. Once I realized my leghorn was broody (this is a first for me!) I collected and gave her the other hens' eggs even though I wasn't positive any of them were fertile, thinking that maybe, just maybe we'd get some silkie cross chicks to remind us of our rooster. Tonight my curiosity got the best of me and I tried to candle a few of them to see if anything was progressing. I think the eggs are on day 7, but I really didn't see anything, except a bit of a shadow in the center of one of the leghorn's eggs. I don't know if this means that none of the eggs were fertile to begin with, if I'm just not good at candling since this is the first time I've tried, or if most of the eggs are too dark shelled for me to see much at this stage with the light I was using (the other eggs are from a RIR and two cuckoo marans with dark brown shells)...

So, do I wait a few more days and try candling again? Do I go ahead and order some fertile eggs to switch out with the possibly infertile ones she's setting now? Or do I just leave my broody girl alone, hope for the best and see what happens in two weeks? Any advice would be much appreciated!!!
 
I am wondering why it is taking so long though. If the other eggs do hatch it will be on day 23. Is it because she had too many eggs and she wasnt able to cover them properly? Is it because I have them on straw and not on pine shavings? or is it because she left her nest for 4 hrs on Day 6 and that may have caused some development to freeze and re-start? Many questions, will keep on wondering!

Thanks @Lady of McCamley
If you are confident that they were all set at the same time...then yes, it could be she had trouble covering them, or more likely they got a little cold on that 4 hour lapse but not cold enough to kill them...it may have simply delayed development.

Hopefully you'll have a bunch of little chicks in the next day or so.

Lady of McCamley
 
Hi Everyone! I'm new here and have a broody dilemma that I'm hoping for some advice on. My white leghorn went broody about a week ago - just a day after my only rooster (a 7-month old silkie) was killed by a coyote. The roo was my only bantam (with 5 full size hens) and although I think he was having some "success" with his hens, I don't think he'd quite worked out his moves with all of the ladies. Before his untimely end, I know that we had at least some fertilized eggs, but certainly not all. Once I realized my leghorn was broody (this is a first for me!) I collected and gave her the other hens' eggs even though I wasn't positive any of them were fertile, thinking that maybe, just maybe we'd get some silkie cross chicks to remind us of our rooster. Tonight my curiosity got the best of me and I tried to candle a few of them to see if anything was progressing. I think the eggs are on day 7, but I really didn't see anything, except a bit of a shadow in the center of one of the leghorn's eggs. I don't know if this means that none of the eggs were fertile to begin with, if I'm just not good at candling since this is the first time I've tried, or if most of the eggs are too dark shelled for me to see much at this stage with the light I was using (the other eggs are from a RIR and two cuckoo marans with dark brown shells)...

So, do I wait a few more days and try candling again? Do I go ahead and order some fertile eggs to switch out with the possibly infertile ones she's setting now? Or do I just leave my broody girl alone, hope for the best and see what happens in two weeks? Any advice would be much appreciated!!!
At day 7, if you have a bright LED type flashlight, you should see a peanut in the middle with veins radiating out on the developing eggs even with the Marans eggs unless they are very dark on the Marans scale (mine were about a 5). You should be able to make out the RIR egg fairly easy...Marans eggs are much tougher so all I can generally see is a vein or 2 of a smudgy shadow in the middle. If I see veins, I know I've got success. Then I look for a greater developing air cell at the fat end with dark mass at the pointy end which grows bigger as time progresses.

I would candle again tonight or tomorrow to see if you notice any difference.

You can also take a toilet paper roll to place the egg into while you shine with a bright LED flashlight to help.

If you don't see anything in the RIR eggs, you may have to figure it is dicey at best for the Marans, and if it were me, I'd probably toss these and plan to get some fertile eggs then.

If you have an incubator on hand...you could leave the best eggs with the hen and place the newly purchased fertile eggs either with the hen or in the incubator. If nothing hatches with the hen in 2 weeks, you can then put those from the incubator that are developing as they should only have a week left. If she does get chicks from the first batch, you may be able to graft the week old chicks with her or heat brood them yourself. It means you will do some juggling with hatches which will be staggered significantly (by a week or more) but it would be an option if you really didn't like the idea of potentially tossing a developing egg from your Silkie rooster.

Good luck. BTW congratulations on your broody...a Leghorn no less!

Lady of McCamley
 
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