• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

Broody sitting on eggs - how to solve my problem?

My broody hen will sometimes leave the clutch of eggs and go and sit in another box,

What should I do when the broody leaves her clutch to sit somewhere else?
I've had that happen a few times. What I suspect is that another hen is on her nest laying an egg when she gets back from her daily constitutional so she gets confused and goes to the wrong nest. Then she doesn't move. When I see her on the wrong nest I move her back to her nest. Most of my broody hens will go back to their nest even if another hen is laying an egg in it but each chicken is different. You can never be sure what any living animal will do. I've had a hen off of her eggs so long they felt really cold yet that hen hatched 11 of 11 eggs.

I am inclined to think she knows what she is doing and the eggs just might be too hot. It is already hot and muggy here in central texas. Feels like temp at 10 am was 87 with humidity at 63%; ambient temp was 82. I do have some frozen water bottles with a small fan blowing cool air in her direction.
I don't think so. Like others, I've had hens hatch in much warmer temperatures. I've seen hens stand in the nests when it is hot, like she was cooling her eggs. In warmer weather my broody hens often spend a long time off of the nest for their daily constitutional compared to how long a hen stays off in colder weather, but that hen is not going to a different nest because her eggs need to cool off.

Should I leave her be when she leaves the eggs, or should I continue to move her back to her clutch? I have moved her twice. Once yesterday, once today.
I believe that you have two options. You can continue to move her back to her nest or you can isolate her in a pen and lock her in there where she can't leave until the eggs hatch. People do it successfully both ways. Of course, the risk of moving her is that you risk breaking her from being broody. Some hens move a lot easier than others. If you let her out a day or two after she hatches the chicks will still be raised with the flock.

This particular hen has been broody twice before and was an excellent mother.
I've had similar experiences and is why I don't believe in that first time broody or experienced broody stuff. I've had great success with first time broody hens and I've had failures from broody hens that were previously successful. Each time they go broody is a unique experience.

I am wondering if she got bit by ants in that box because there were ants on the egg remains when I found it yesterday.
Who knows, it could be. I'd have issues if I were being bitten by ants. It may not have been another hen on her nest that originally moved her.

Perhaps I should move her clutch to a new box?
You can certainly try, but I'd want to be around where I could observe. They tend to imprint on the nest, not the eggs.
 
We move the hen, nest and eggs all at one time, at night, into the broody pen. Our broody pen stays in place at all times, even when it is not being used. It has also been used as a grow out pen, and hospital pen.
 
I've had that happen a few times. What I suspect is that another hen is on her nest laying an egg when she gets back from her daily constitutional so she gets confused and goes to the wrong nest. Then she doesn't move. When I see her on the wrong nest I move her back to her nest. Most of my broody hens will go back to their nest even if another hen is laying an egg in it but each chicken is different. You can never be sure what any living animal will do. I've had a hen off of her eggs so long they felt really cold yet that hen hatched 11 of 11 eggs.


I don't think so. Like others, I've had hens hatch in much warmer temperatures. I've seen hens stand in the nests when it is hot, like she was cooling her eggs. In warmer weather my broody hens often spend a long time off of the nest for their daily constitutional compared to how long a hen stays off in colder weather, but that hen is not going to a different nest because her eggs need to cool off.


I believe that you have two options. You can continue to move her back to her nest or you can isolate her in a pen and lock her in there where she can't leave until the eggs hatch. People do it successfully both ways. Of course, the risk of moving her is that you risk breaking her from being broody. Some hens move a lot easier than others. If you let her out a day or two after she hatches the chicks will still be raised with the flock.


I've had similar experiences and is why I don't believe in that first time broody or experienced broody stuff. I've had great success with first time broody hens and I've had failures from broody hens that were previously successful. Each time they go broody is a unique experience.


Who knows, it could be. I'd have issues if I were being bitten by ants. It may not have been another hen on her nest that originally moved her.


You can certainly try, but I'd want to be around where I could observe. They tend to imprint on the nest, not the eggs.
Thank you.
 
I have a broody hatching eggs right now (like 2 hatched when I checked earlier tonight and more pips. LOL)...... But it has been a disaster. She hatched last year as well but only 1 baby and no fault of her own the eggs just weren't fertilized (crappy seller). Last year she switched boxes but didn't think as much. I do have more hens this year so maybe that is why she switched so much this year. I brood and let them raise the chicks in the coop/run with everyone. I have a camera in my coop so I put her back as soon as I can when I see she went back to the wrong nest. MOST times it was because someone was in laying when she came back so went to another box, a few times she just went in a different box. This time I have tried to move her back to her eggs, then if I noticed she was going back to the same box a few days in a row (thankfully she only leaves once a day so once I move her back she stays till maybe the next day) I have moved the eggs over to that box in hopes she would stay there... nope. There were a few times she went back for 2-3 days so I would think we were finally on the right track then she would start swapping again...

Today eggs were at least internally pipped if not externally and I was at work and she went back to the wrong box, I was FREAKING out, Thankfully one other girl went in to lay and was in there for a while but after she went out another one didn't come (some days they cycle on and off the whole time till I can get her back on so figured at least hte other hens kept them warm. LOL) so they were left for about 2.5 hrs with noone on them. I was so nervous they were all dead. so I candled them before i put her back on. well the pipped ones (internal and external) I saw movement then a couple were shadowing and saw movement and some were full and I saw nothing but hoping I missed them moving..... I put her back on and 2 hatched. Hopefully when I get up in the morning there are a lot more chicks under her. I really hope she is as good of a mom as she was last time and doesn't just go back to any box if she takes a quick run out before the chicks are ready! I did pull the dry one out to peek at it and when I put it back she was talking to it and lifted up for it to climb under so she is good that way at least.

But all that talking to say just try to keep an eye on her and if you want to leave her try not to stress too much since those eggs are pretty strong with what they can handle. So even with them going back to the wrong box you can have a hatch.... I can let you know how GOOD of a hatch after hers are done, but fingers crossed still really good
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom