Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Might be better to separate the cockbirds.I guess i like the idea of separating just the chicken until her eggs are no longer fertile, then let her be fertilized by the rooster of choice and go back. I feel bad that she won't be able to run around for a whole month!
Wow Ridgrunner, so much super useful info, thank you!!Welcome to the forum, glad you joined.
I can help with two of your questions. It takes about 25 hours for an egg to make its way through the hen's internal egg making factory. The egg can only be fertilized during the first few minute of that journey. That means is a mating tales place on a Thursday, Thursday's egg will not be fertile from that mating. Friday's egg might or might not be, depending on timing. Don't count on it. Saturday's egg should be fertile. You can always confirm by looking for the bull's eye but obviously you cannot incubate that opened egg.
At the end of the mating act the rooster hops off, his part is done. The hen then stands up, fluffs up, and shakes. This fluffy shake gets the sperm into a special container near where the egg starts its internal journey. That sperm can remain viable in that container for quite a while, anywhere from about 9 days to even more than three weeks.
Most of us count on the hen remaining fertile for at least two weeks after a mating, that usually works out. Many people count on the hen not being fertile after three weeks which also usually works out. But there are fairly rare occasions where the sperm remains viable for more than three weeks. So if you wait three weeks you are pretty sure, if you wait more you are even more sure.
So you need to separate the hen from any rooster you do not want to be the father for at least three weeks, more is better. You need to put her with the rooster you want to be the father three or four days before you start collecting eggs. You can put him with her earlier if you desire. You can keep her with other hens if you wish as long as you know which are her eggs for incubation. You have several different options on how to manage this.
As others have said, if you want to control when the eggs hatch (this might be important for a chicken show) you need an incubator. You cannot depend on a hen going broody when it is convenient for you even if you have a flock where the hens go broody a lot.
Many hens will never go broody in their life and you cannot make them. Leaving the eggs to pile up will not make a hen go broody. If a hen tends to go broody I think it can help if the number of eggs in her nest increase slowly as if she were laying them all, but I've tried that a few times and it never did work. My hens tend to go broody a lot but not necessarily when I want them to.
You have a lot of different options if you do get a broody hen and wish to use her. Some people isolate her in all kinds of different ways to incubate, hatch, or even raise the chicks. Others let her do some or all of this with the flock. I don't see that any of these are more right or wrong than others, it's just different ways we do it. If you want more information let me know and I'll discuss it more.
Good luck, you have some beautiful chickens. And once again,![]()