Can I get hatching eggs for a broody?

Annalyse

Crowing
5 Years
Mar 24, 2020
1,600
1,248
326
New Jersey
I have one silkie in a standard flock. The rooster doesn’t mate her and is on the aggressive side. I want her to hatch silkies and they will be separated into a different coop. She’s my only hen that goes broody and she has been going broody like five times in a month lol. If I buy hatching eggs can I just give them to her? How would I keep them incubated by the time they get to her? I’ve never hatched nor let them hatch eggs.
 
Yes you can put any fertile eggs under a broody hen. While waiting for the eggs she should be in the place you want the chicks to hatch with fake or disposal eggs under her. If the place you want her to hatch is different than where she is now she will need a cage or similar idea to keep her from returning to the original nest site. All eggs that are to be hatched should to be placed under her at the same time. Eggs that are stored at room temperature can be up to two weeks old before they need to be incubated or placed under a broody.
 
Yes you can put any fertile eggs under a broody hen. While waiting for the eggs she should be in the place you want the chicks to hatch with fake or disposal eggs under her. If the place you want her to hatch is different than where she is now she will need a cage or similar idea to keep her from returning to the original nest site. All eggs that are to be hatched should to be placed under her at the same time. Eggs that are stored at room temperature can be up to two weeks old before they need to be incubated or placed under a broody.
If they hatch. Should I bring them inside or leave them with her? Like as soon as they put out of the egg should I let them be.
 
You might want to put more than 2 eggs. If one of the eggs turns out to be infertile or something you could end up with a lone chick. Chicks do much better with at least one buddy. Silkies make great mothers. I personally would leave the chicks with her. First time broodies do just fine. Hatching and raising chicks is an instinct not a learned behavior.
 
You might want to put more than 2 eggs. If one of the eggs turns out to be infertile or something you could end up with a lone chick. Chicks do much better with at least one buddy. Silkies make great mothers. I personally would leave the chicks with her. First time broodies do just fine. Hatching and raising chicks is an instinct not a learned behavior.
Is it better to give her fertile eggs or slip baby chicks under her. From my experience with her I feel like she’d take either even if I just showed them to her. Lol. She’s a very desperate hen when it comes to being broody. But idk cause she’s never actually seen a chick in her life. She’s two years.
 

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