Instead of taking her to the babies, take the babies to her. Put them under her at night. You might let her settle from the first attempt. Let her back in her broody nest and poke the babies in under her rear end in the dark. Be there at first light to see how she has adjusted during the night.
I'll have to try that when I have a safe place for a broody to have chicks. The house she is broody in, is not safe for babies - which is why I took her to the brooder box in the garage with the turkeys in it. I really need to get some broody-safe houses built so I can let them do their thing and decrease how many I have to incubate and brood in the house.
After a broody hen has settled over her adoptive chicks for a night in her nest, I have been able to place her and her chicks in a floor pen the next day. The pen is a portable set up about 24 to 30 x 36 inches that is 30 inches tall made from recycled freezer shelving....big enough for a nest of hay, feeder and waterer and wood shavings to cover the dirt floor in my hen house.
For the first several weeks she will teach them to eat, drink, dust bathe and answer her calls. I offer greens and treats as well as chick feed and layer pellets. It is surprising how quickly the chicks eat everything in sight.
The rest of the flock adjusts to her mothering sounds. I then begin opening up one end of the pen for the hen to take her chicks on trips in the hen house and soon outside. She returns to her pen with her chicks or picks a site in the henhouse herself. She defends her chicks from other hens.
Hopefully by then the rains will have let up some. We are having the same problem in Oklahoma that you are having in northern Texas....too much mud for young chicks.
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