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Maybe my girls are just too persistent! I have tried putting them on the roosts and dark and locking them out for the day and I have never had it work. The only way I have ever been able to break them was by dipping them. Although I rarely break my broodies... I have a broody on eggs as we speak! Granted they are Toad eggs...You are braver than I. I don't have a garage (in this yard) and I don't want a wet hen in the house.
It shouldn't take that long...although I've never done a suspended broody cage. I don't have enough cages.Earlier this summer, I stopped 13 broody hens overnight by moving them onto roosts once it got dark in the evening. Only one had thoughts of it in the morning...so I put her back in the back pen and that worked. That was fairly painless.
The next group was a bit more tenacious...but I kept the eggs gathered and locked them outside for part of the day. That worked as well.
However I don't have egg eaters per say. I break them lots of raw eggs myself and they aren't interested in eggs I don't feed them. Hopefully hers wouldn't peck since they've had clay eggs.
Oh gosh....raise them toads up then.Maybe my girls are just too persistent! I have tried putting them on the roosts and dark and locking them out for the day and I have never had it work. The only way I have ever been able to break them was by dipping them. Although I rarely break my broodies... I have a broody on eggs as we speak! Granted they are Toad eggs...
Oh gosh....raise them toads up then.Just a quick question...do they handle the cold well?
I am aware of the toads.Have you seen the Toad thread on here? They were originated in MN LOL! From what I have seen and heard yes, they do take the cold