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personally, i'd try breaking the cycle... pen her somewhere else for a week or 2 if you can... that's usually the trick for me.
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Quote:
personally, i'd try breaking the cycle... pen her somewhere else for a week or 2 if you can... that's usually the trick for me.
personally, i'd try breaking the cycle... pen her somewhere else for a week or 2 if you can... that's usually the trick for me.
Could I put her in with my silkies tonight? 5 hens and a roo.
well I took her out of the box this evening and put her out with the flock. she didn't panic. she ate and drank and flew up on the roost in the run. I ran to town and came back to close up the coop and she was back in the box. Im not sure what to do. I am limited on space right now. Just the large fowl coop and silken coop.
If you don't have anyplace to put her where she know the other birds and they know her, she will be better off where she is. Don't leave eggs in with her, if she still has the plastic one - take it out, and if there is any way to block her out of the box/coop or whatever your arrangements are, try to keep her from getting back to it, and don't fret too much, it's not going to kill her - it would just be better if she didn't go broody.
Do you have a cage that you can hang from a wall or from the ceiling? If so, put her in there for a few days with no bedding. It should cool her off and break her.
I've had bantam girls do that. one bantam brahma laid for about a week then went broody, ended up hatching 18 chicks. but I wouldn't say that's normal for any breed, though I've also had dorkings do that to me this year as well. one pullet, hatched mid November, went broody in may. only reason I let her was because it would have involved disassembling my deck to get to her. LOL