broody???

She'll sit in the nest and refuse to move from it, generally. I've also had broody hens who stalk around the coop whining and refuse to leave it.
 
Quote:
They also make rather distinctive vocalizations (kind of like a chittering noise) and they are all puffed up on the nest. And then there are the broody poops...a small mountain of foul smelling goo delivered once a day. Disgusting!
 
Quote:
They also make rather distinctive vocalizations (kind of like a chittering noise) and they are all puffed up on the nest. And then there are the broody poops...a small mountain of foul smelling goo delivered once a day. Disgusting!

petunia puffs up on the nest and sits there for a couple of hours. we dont have a rooster.
 
My broody lets me know about 2 weeks in advance of her actually setting her fluffy butt on the nest. She does a different 'Buk, Buk, Buk' and poofs up when approached. Sometimes she even says, 'look, look, look' while finding small bits of food to eat, as if she's showing chicks what to eat. Then she finally plunks her butt down, and doesn't get up. She invites the others to lay in her nest, too. Then keeps their eggs!

Poor thing, last time I didn't let her set - every day I'd take her off the nest, and take MY eggs from her. She got fed up after her 3 weeks, and decided to join the girls outside. Maybe it was because when I'd take her off the nest, she'd poof up like a turkey! I warned her that Thanksgiving is coming up, she'd better not pretend to be a turkey!
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the3ofus+oursixchicks :

Quote:
They also make rather distinctive vocalizations (kind of like a chittering noise) and they are all puffed up on the nest. And then there are the broody poops...a small mountain of foul smelling goo delivered once a day. Disgusting!

petunia puffs up on the nest and sits there for a couple of hours. we dont have a rooster.​

Unfortunately, that doesn't matter. I don't have any roos at this point and mostly don't keep roos. That hasn't stopped me from being blessed with 2 chronic broodies. Freeloaders!
 
Yep, they'll go broody, rooster or not. Even on golf balls, or plastic eggs, a rock, nothing at all! When the hormones say they're to be broody, they go broody. I've often heard broody behavior called "zombie pancake" and that's pretty descriptive of what mine turn into. Hunker down low on the nest in a pancake and zone out like a zombie. Don't want to be disturbed but none of mine will actually bite or peck me, they just protest if I do. Except one, she's in the habit now of letting out an ear-piercing shriek. Crazy thing.
 

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