fur-mum
Songster
True story. Fuzz fought everyone off.A hormonal broody hen, will whip the layers,
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True story. Fuzz fought everyone off.A hormonal broody hen, will whip the layers,
I had one hen that insisted on being broody most of the summer. I think she sat 3 times the year before last, and twice that summer (then she and most of the rest of the flock go wiped out by predators). She'd lay maybe an egg or two between weaning one batch and wanting to set again. I'd love to have a broody raise some of the chicks I have coming this spring.I have a leg horn that keeps going broody. She is two years old now. Her first year she went broody in July and then again in September. I put her in a cage to break her each time which worked. Except no eggs for most of last summer. This year she started to lay again and guess what today she is showing signs of going broody again. I took her off her nest and put her in the run she seem to stay there but I saw the evil eye knowing she is going broody again. Has anyone ever had a hen that does this none stop? Should I give her some eggs to hatch will this help in the long run. I do have two new chicks coming April 23, can I have her raise these?
Funny how that works. Those who don't want broodies can't get them to stop, and those who do want them are constantly trying to figure out how to make a hen go broody!What a bummer I love her white eggs when I get them. I can't believe my luck having only two hens, no roosters.
^^^ This.oh, if I had chicks coming (I do) and had a broody hen, I would be thanking the Gods. Just leave her alone, the tighter she sticks to the nest, the better the mother she'll be. Leaving her alone is the key to a good broody mother. A lot of times, people trying to be careful interference cause more problems than they help.
When you get the chicks go down in the early evening, you want the layers roosted up, it needs to be dark. The chicks need to peeping madly, and this sounds heartless, but let them get a little cold, this makes them more active and peep loudly. Leave them like this for an hour. Then in the complete dark, with a flashlight pointed down, just enough to barely see. Place a single chick on her back. If the chick is a day old, he/she will disappear, or stick them underneath her. Those cold chicks will burrow in like ticks. It is their movement, and their peeping that flips the hormone from brooding to being a mother hen. The hen should start to growl and cluck to them.
This is the hard part. Shut up the coop and leave them alone to figure it out. Sometimes people go down, get everything stirred up, and then say the hen won't take the chick or is a mean mother. They interfere, and that confuses the chick and the mother, and pretty soon no bond is made.
A hormonal broody hen, will whip the layers, and raise those chicks right in the flock. If you have enough room in your set up, it is the best way of raising chicks.
Mrs K
I am so nervous as I have never had a hen raise chicks before. The two I have now week old. So to nervous to try with them but I do have new ones coming Thurs. so not sure if it safe for her to add chicks. Isn't broody hens hard on their bodies. Should leave her nesting mean while or break her than put new babies with older babies? If I choose to use her to care for the new babies, should I move her now into protected duck house away from other hen?oh, if I had chicks coming (I do) and had a broody hen, I would be thanking the Gods. Just leave her alone, the tighter she sticks to the nest, the better the mother she'll be. Leaving her alone is the key to a good broody mother. A lot of times, people trying to be careful interference cause more problems than they help.
When you get the chicks go down in the early evening, you want the layers roosted up, it needs to be dark. The chicks need to peeping madly, and this sounds heartless, but let them get a little cold, this makes them more active and peep loudly. Leave them like this for an hour. Then in the complete dark, with a flashlight pointed down, just enough to barely see. Place a single chick on her back. If the chick is a day old, he/she will disappear, or stick them underneath her. Those cold chicks will burrow in like ticks. It is their movement, and their peeping that flips the hormone from brooding to being a mother hen. The hen should start to growl and cluck to them.
This is the hard part. Shut up the coop and leave them alone to figure it out. Sometimes people go down, get everything stirred up, and then say the hen won't take the chick or is a mean mother. They interfere, and that confuses the chick and the mother, and pretty soon no bond is made.
A hormonal broody hen, will whip the layers, and raise those chicks right in the flock. If you have enough room in your set up, it is the best way of raising chicks.
Mrs K
Your chicken knows instinctively more than you do about raising babies. I wouls not put the week old ones in with her. The older the chicks (even at a week old), the less chance of them bonding with the hen. They haven't had that chance, so they have no idea what to do. If it were my hen, I'd leave her on the nest until the babies come, and then do as Mrs. K described. Let them get a little chilled so they're peeping, bring them out to her in the night and with as little light and fuss as possible, either put them on her back or slip them under her and remove the eggs.I am so nervous as I have never had a hen raise chicks before. The two I have now week old. So to nervous to try with them but I do have new ones coming Thurs. so not sure if it safe for her to add chicks. Isn't broody hens hard on their bodies. Should leave her nesting mean while or break her than put new babies with older babies? If I choose to use her to care for the new babies, should I move her now into protected duck house away from other hen?
I would let her hatch them as opposed to incubating them and giving her the babies. Whatever you choose, I hope it all goes well.I do have a neighbor that has fertile eggs, should I do this or just keep breaking her. I cant' believe my luck I would give her the babies, as I am already getting four additional chicks and don't want any more than six chickens.
Is it okay to leave her in the laying box with the other hen when I add the babies? I have a large laying box that there is room to add waterier and feeder next to her. She is the alpha.Your chicken knows instinctively more than you do about raising babies. I wouls not put the week old ones in with her. The older the chicks (even at a week old), the less chance of them bonding with the hen. They haven't had that chance, so they have no idea what to do. If it were my hen, I'd leave her on the nest until the babies come, and then do as Mrs. K described. Let them get a little chilled so they're peeping, bring them out to her in the night and with as little light and fuss as possible, either put them on her back or slip them under her and remove the eggs.