How long??

birdman4259

In the Brooder
5 Years
May 4, 2014
17
0
22
Hi all. I just picked up a rooster for my flock of 14 hens. I am wondering how long he needs to be with them before I can start incubating eggs with reasonable expectations of fertile eggs. I realize there is no set time. Just looking for some advice from those with more experience than this newbie to the game lol.

Sandy
 
Within three days of mating a hen, her eggs should be fertile. It will take even a very active rooster a while to get around to all 14 hens, but I would hope that within a week he will have managed to cover all of the hens. What breed rooster is he?
welcome-byc.gif
 
Last edited:
Depends on how well the hens accept the rooster and how adept he is at treading them.....might take awhile or they may be immediately overjoyed and receptive.

You can check your eggs as you use them to see if they are fertile or not.
 
It takes about 25 hours for an egg to go through the hen’s internal egg factory. That egg can only be fertilized in the first few minutes of that journey. That means if a successful mating takes place on a Monday, Monday’s egg cannot be fertile. Tuesday’s egg may or may not be, depending in the time of the mating and when that egg started its journey. I would not count on it being fertile. Wednesday’s egg will almost certainly be fertile.

Note that is after a successful mating. A rooster does not always mate each hen every day. After a successful mating, the hen normally stays fertile for about two weeks. Some may go a bit shorter, many can go longer, but you can generally count on two weeks. So all he needs is to mate each hen once every two weeks to do his job. One reasonably active rooster should have no trouble keeping 14 hens fertile.

Like the others said there are factors that determine how soon that will be, but just follow Aart’s link and look for the bull’s eye. If most of the eggs you open have the bull’s eye, most of the eggs you don’t open will too.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom