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- #11
Thank you so much for the detail! I needed that tonight. I will get out my hatching eggs tomorrow and be ready to move 1 broody to the new location tomorrow night. I will let the Silkie on floor stay there, since that is always HER spot and I don't think a move would do well for her.If you move her and give her the hatching eggs, she might stay put, but she may not settle and your hatching eggs could spoil so it is better to get her moved to the brooder location for a couple of days before you give her the hatching eggs, just to make sure it all goes smoothly with the important eggs.
If you already have a nest made in the brooder, put some ordinary eggs in it and lift your broody onto them at night, when it is dark as she will be more likely to settle in the dark. If she stays on that nest for the next day or two, you can then swap the eggs out for the hatching eggs. The thing with broody hens is that they cannot tell one egg from another or count for that matter to know how many there are. But what they do know is where their nest is, so moving their nest is a much bigger deal than swapping eggs. In a more wild environment, they would make a nest away from other chickens and lay an egg into it each day until they have a clutch and then start to incubate them. Each day they come off the nest to eat, drink, poop and dust bath for 20 mins or so and then return to the nest.... so it is the nest site that is imprinted on them and some hens panic when they are moved from the nest site they have chosen and are desperate to get back to it and will not settle.... others are just happy to have a nest of eggs under them but if they are not confined they may return to the wrong nest after their daily broody break, especially if another hen has climbed onto their nest to lay in it whilst they were taking a break. They will sometimes climb into an adjoining nest box and then go into their broody trance and not get back onto the eggs when the other hen vacates the nest.
You have to understand how a broody hen works in order to give your hatching eggs the best chance. So many people who brood in communal nests find that the hen has abandoned the eggs or eggs have been broken or kicked out or chicks have been squashed and blame the broody when it is their poor set up and lack of understanding of broody hens that caused the problem.
If I were you, I would make a nest in the brooder, put 3-4 normal eggs in there and lift your most committed broody onto it at night and fasten her in. Check the next day to make sure she is still settled and swap out the normal eggs for the hatching eggs the following night or 2 nights later (depending on when you receive the eggs), if she is happy with the new set up. Bear in mind that eggs need humidity to hatch so completely dry bedding is not ideal. ... chickens are naturally ground nesting and a sod of earth turf, cut and turned upside down in the nesting box (ie dirt up) was the traditional nesting material given to a broody hen.
i did have another question: Assuming I keep the brooder box door open during the incubation period, do I want to keep the brooder box open after the chicks hatch? If they fall out, they can't get back in.. mama can... all my silks know how to get in and out of that box. The box is made with 2 hinged doors that drop down to open, but can also be closed with a latch at the top.
Again, thank you so much for the help!