One of the things I look forward to in the winter is not having to nest hunt. Most hens to take a winter break from laying. Most years there are one or two pullets who lay eggs over the winter and a couple is a lot easier to keep an eye on than 15 to 20 hens!
I've had the nest box in my house stripped out for the past couple of months. It saves a lot of cleaning up after the chickens have scratched about in the box.
Hurry the gray hen sitting in the nest box in the second picture has been wandering around with both Cillin and Treacle looking for nest sites. For Tribe 1 to which she belongs, there are plenty of options, tow boxes in their coop, two maternity units just outside my house and an unlimited acreage if she chose to lay outside.
Despite all the choices both Cillin and Treacle will bring her into the house and crouch under the empty nest box making nesting calls.
I gave in in the end and put some straw in the house nest box. All the senior hens came to check it out. Cillin practically bullied Hurry into the house nest box. Fat bird has driven Hurry out of both the maternity unit boxes on at least two occasions that I've seen.
Cillin has stood on the nest box edge making nesting calls for a good hour now and one by one the hens have got in and checked the box over, including Hurry.
There is absolutely nothing about this nest box that fits in with the uasual advice about what hens prefer to lay eggs in. It has virtually no privacy, it isn't that comfortable (I'm making adjustments) it's noisy, yet every hen in Tribe 1 and a couple from Tribe 3 are reluctant to lay eggs anywhere else.
Here's Cilling keeping an eye on Mel as she checks the nest.
View attachment 1999438 Even Fat Bird climbed in at one point to endorse the site and made no attempt to drive Hurry off the nest.
The noise as this goes on is incredible. All the hens call and the roosters make an incredible range of sounds from what is almost a purr to a banshee scream.
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