• giveaway ENDS SOON! Cutest Baby Fowl Photo Contest: Win a Brinsea Maxi 24 EX Connect CLICK HERE!

How much is too much?

Mellowchick

In the Brooder
Apr 22, 2022
18
1
24
My broody hen graciously accepted 13 chicks I introduced to her as day old chicks, she had just hatched 4 of her own making it a total of 17! They are all doing great but I did have to remove 4 eggs in order to do the large adoption of the day old chicks that were mailed to me. I hatched the 4 remaining in my garage and now I’m wondering if I’m asking for trouble if I try to give her these remaining 4. That would be 21 babies. Is that asking too much of my hen or will it compromise the chicks I really want to stay alive which are already with her? Should I just give those 4 chicks a new home and be happy with the 17 she is nicely raising thus far?
 
I think the 17 is too any. No way would I add more. Also,how much of am age difference is there between these chicks nd the others. She may not even accept them if she stopped sitting a while ago.
 
Interesting question. When I was a kid we had a hen hide a nest and bring 18 chicks off. I have no idea how many eggs she started with, I never did find that nest. With my flock I had one hen raise 15 chicks, another raised 16. These were both a mix of chicks the broody hatched and incubator chicks. I'm not afraid to give a hen a lot of chicks but there are things I consider.

One is the time of the year. How warm is it. In fairly warm weather the hen doesn't necessarily need to cover all the chicks at night, often some chicks in a fairly small brood will sleep next to the hen instead of under her. In colder weather she needs to be able to cover them. They grow pretty fast. She may be able to cover all of them one week but not the next. Even with smaller broods the chicks can get too big to all fit under her at night but by then they can handle the colder weather. People on this forum often underestimate just how well a chick can handle cooler temperatures but there are limits.

Another consideration along the same lines of her covering them. A broody hen can cover a lot more bantams or smaller breed chicks than she can full sized chicks.

Can a hen keep track of that many chicks? I don't think there is a clear answer to that. Some do better than others. Some chicks stick pretty close to Mama, some are more adventurous and may need to be kept track of. I think this depends on the personality of the chicks as much as the ability of the broody. It's not so much a numbers thing as just luck.

I don't know the right answer for you. She may lose some of those 17 chicks. Even a hen with just a few chicks can lose some. She may have no problem with all 21. Unfortunately there is no way to predict it with any accuracy. I probably would not try it, it may be stretching it a bit much. But I've been wrong before.
 
Last edited:
I think the 17 is too any. No way would I add more. Also,how much of am age difference is there between these chicks nd the others. She may not even accept them if she stopped sitting a while ago.
They arrived within 2 days of hatch, the day olds that came in the mail were here first then her eggs hatched a day or 2 later, I felt like it was too many as well but just didn’t know since she’s technically not feeding them milk I didn’t think it was draining on her, she just needs to keep them warm. But maybe someone will get left out if it’s too crowded. Should I remove the 4 that I’m not interested in keeping for myself and re-home those so she goes down to 13?
 
They arrived within 2 days of hatch, the day olds that came in the mail were here first then her eggs hatched a day or 2 later, I felt like it was too many as well but just didn’t know since she’s technically not feeding them milk I didn’t think it was draining on her, she just needs to keep them warm. But maybe someone will get left out if it’s too crowded. Should I remove the 4 that I’m not interested in keeping for myself and re-home those so she goes down to 13
Interesting question. When I was a kid we had a hen hide a nest and bring 18 chicks off. I have no idea how many eggs she started with, I never did find that nest. With my flock I had one hen raise 15 chicks, another raised 16. These were both a mix of chicks the broody hatched and incubator chicks. I'm not afraid to give a hen a lot of chicks but there are things I consider.

One is the time of the year. How warm is it. In fairly warm weather the hen doesn't necessarily need to cover all the chicks at night, often some chicks in a fairly small brood will sleep next to the hen instead of under her. In colder weather she needs to be able to cover them. They grow pretty fast. She may be able to cover all of them one week but not the next. Even with smaller broods the chicks can get too big to all fit under her at night but by then they can handle the colder weather. People on this forum often underestimate just how well a chick can handle cooler temperatures but there are limits.

Another consideration along the same lines of her covering them. A broody hen can cover a lot more bantams or smaller breed chicks than she can full sized chicks.

Can a hen keep track of that many chicks? I don't think there is a clear answer to that. Some do better than others. Some chicks stick pretty close to Mama, some are more adventurous and may need to be kept track of. I think this depends on the personality of the chicks as much as the ability of the broody. It's not so much a numbers thing as just luck.

I don't know the right answer for you. She may lose some of those 17 chicks. She may have no problem with all 21. Unfortunately there is no way to predict it with any accuracy. I probably would not try it, it may be stretching it a bit much. But I've been wrong before.
Thank you I appreciate your time, this helps me weigh out my options:)
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom