- Apr 20, 2015
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Usually fertility of the eggs start dropping after a week and by 14 days after the egg has been laid it is rather unlikely to hatch. In the wild, a clutch of eggs might be 10-12 eggs meaning the oldest egg is still within the 14 day limit when they start sitting on the eggs. So if she hasn't started sitting 14 days after the first egg was laid, that one is unlikely to hatch - though some of the younger eggs might still hatch if she starts sitting, and the first one could still hatch as well.
Hay seems to trigger my buttons to go broody - a handful near the nest so they feel more sheltered and have some material to build a proper nest from. Probably more than a handful for bobwhites as they are larger..
Hay seems to trigger my buttons to go broody - a handful near the nest so they feel more sheltered and have some material to build a proper nest from. Probably more than a handful for bobwhites as they are larger..