I'm not sure its really size that is the issue because my coop is a decent size as well. Its more that the chicks don't initially recognize their mother's unique voice so they will wander away and wind up in a corner, scared and lonely (and cold depending on time of year). After the first chicks hatch, the mother is still sitting tight on the next waiting for any other eggs to hatch so she won't get off to go and rescue the chick. If it is at night, the chick will often find another bird who is willing to let it get under so it stays warm until morning, but then that hen, not being broody, will leave in the morning and the chick still hasn't figured out how to find its mom. So for me the simplest solution is to move them to a small pen where the only warm body option is the mother. The chicks may still wander away but will gravitate back towards the correct warm body, and without numerous other voices, the chicks quickly learn the sound of their mother, so that when they are released back into the general population, they can pick her out of the dozens and follow her around successfully. I call it "bonding time". Once bonded, the family will stay together until the chicks are ready to be independent.I'm pretty lucky that I have the setup I do. Huge coop and if need be I can move broodies to our brooding room that is attached to the the coop, but so far have not had to. I had one chick get lost once (got on the other side of a buffer wall we built inside the coop) but it found Mama pretty quick.
My broodies rarely peck at me either. I give them a little pat on the head and move my hand under their head and under them and they just grumble a bit! I learned my lesson about letting others gather eggs from under the broodies when my 6 and 8 year old gathered ALL of the eggs (under the DH supervision of course) I didn't catch the mistake until well into the next day and we had to dispose of the entire basket, since we didn't know which eggs were broody eggs and which weren't!![]()
If you want any fertile eggs, just let me know. I can save some BR and NH eggs for you - they will either be pure, first generation delawares or black sexlinks, depending on which of the two breeds of rooster fertilized the hen last. And of course if you don't mind mixed breed birds, I can get you any number of those eggs any time you like.I need to replenish my laying flock for sure.