How long will mama mourn?

shelleyd2008

the bird is the word
11 Years
Sep 14, 2008
23,381
203
351
Adair Co., KY
I decided to take my hen's chicks away from her, at about 8-9 weeks old. I hadn't planned on keeping any of them, and they were free ranging, so it seemed like I was losing 1 a day.

It has been a week now since the babies have left, and the hen is still looking for them! She goes to the tractor where they used to sleep, she comes running every time she hears a chick cry, it is just so sad!!
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I feel so sorry for her. I figured she would mourn them, but nothing like this! I had heard maybe a few days, then they forget about them.

She doesn't seem to be eating much, and she doesn't hang out with the other chickens. Mostly she tries to hide from them, in between chick searches. A friend that bought some of her chicks said she would let me have one back, but those have been gone for 2 weeks, so I figured they wouldn't stay with her anymore anyway.

Can I do anything for her? It is just heartbreaking to watch her hunt for her babies! She won't 'grieve herself to death', right?
 
At 8-9 weeks old she should have been kicking them out anyways. My Silkie has 10-wk-old chicks and she's been broody again for a week.
 
I have some that are due to hatch in a day or so, but I was afraid of her leaving them. It is getting cold here.

I have another hen that has chicks that are at least 12 weeks old, that are still with her.

I guess my hens are just baby-ers!

Whenever I let my young silkies out of their cage, she comes running, until she notices they aren't hers.

Do you think the baby that my friend has would take back up with her, if I got it back?
 
It is worth a try. You can bring that one back and put it back in the tractor...watch her and see how they interact. If she wants the baby and the baby wants her, there is your solution.
 
yeah let us know how u go....

but yeah i would suggest to monitor their behaviours very closely...

because ive been told that a hen can have the potential to kill a chick if its not thiers
thats why when they say to introduce new hens..better to have them the same age.
 
Oh, dear. That must be hard for you...
It's possible she misses them, I suppose. The only time I had a hen raise chicks naturally, she never kicked out the babies - they still live together over two years later. She even kept helping them find food long past the point she should have.
 

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