- Apr 19, 2013
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Quote: Are they large fowl eggs? Do you have two broodies? Why don't you ask the question on a Silkie thread. You could get a good idea by putting six fake eggs under her for a few days and then make a decision.
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Quote: Are they large fowl eggs? Do you have two broodies? Why don't you ask the question on a Silkie thread. You could get a good idea by putting six fake eggs under her for a few days and then make a decision.
Quote: see below....
That is adorable! Thanks. I am very excited about this (kind of like Christmas morning) I ordered 6+ cochin bantam eggs and I was just reading above the post about how many eggs to place under the broody hen. Do you think 6 is ok?
I agree with jajeanpierre about trying with fake eggs for a short while to test coverage ability.... as an alternative... you can get out an incubator, or make a short term one out of a shoe box with bedding in it and heat lamp. Give the broody the eggs she can easily cover and set 3 or 4 into your incubator. After day 7 to 10, candle all eggs and remove any clears. You can then probably replace any eggs you removed from the broody with eggs from your incubator to keep her at the level you wanted her at... or wait till hatch day and slip the incubator hatched chicks under the broody to raise. I wouldn't overload her with chicks, but it is a good way of maximizing the broody capabilities for you if you have to buy a certain number of eggs. (since some folks only sell them as a half or full dozen)
Quote: Most Ameraucana eggs are not all that big. If you are going to move her, move her with whatever fake eggs she is sitting on before you get the hatching eggs. Can't you leave her where she is? The two times I hatched eggs under a broody, they were hatched in the coop. I moved the first batch the day after they hatched because I had just put 12 juvenile Ameraucanas in the pen and I was worried for their safety. The juveniles were a bit stressed and I worried a chick might fall out and be trampled accidentally by a flighty juvenile. I didn't move the other hatch until a few days after hatch when she brought it out of the nest (or it fell out and she joined it there).
No, just put them under her. She's a Silkie--she would probably brood and ice cube.Another newbie question: Should the hatching eggs that I plan on putting in the new broody nest be warmed up a bit first?
Thanks.
A hen with chicks is still a broody, her hormone levels stay changed for about 4=6 weeks after chicks hatch. After that she will "wean" the chicks, and go back to laying.
So, my broody who is "re-brooding" is very determined. We have attempted to break her for about a week now, no go. She is puffed up and sitting on nothing. I don't mind her sitting again, but I'm worried about how hot it is here. I'm in FL, and the next month will be brutal. She is a very "puffy" hen (barnyard mix), and I don't want her to overheat. Should I just graft her some chicks from the feed store? Has anyone ever had a hen heat stroke trying to brood? Maybe I'm just worrying to much.