I have a big wire parrot cage that sets up on a heavy wire stand that I use for our Broody Buster. The hens go in there with food & water, but no bedding. They have cover but are not in the dark. It takes 3-5 days for them to stop feeling broody and be able to go back to their regular lives.
I don't think it makes them feel "depressed", but they may have a look on their faces that could be interpreted that way. As long as they have a supply of food, clean water, shelter from the weather, and protection from any temperature extremes, they have no reason to complain. I don't think they're pining for lost motherhood the way a woman would if she were in the same situation. I think they more or less obey their hormones, and the voices only they can hear in their heads, and this time in the Broody Buster is a time of transition, of changing the channels.
After 2-3 days I do let my hens out briefly, to see if they've changed their minds. If they hang with their flock & stay away from the nest boxes, I know their mood has broken. But if they just take a hasty drink & a few quick bites and then zoom back to the nest boxes, I put them right back in the Buster.
I don't think it makes them feel "depressed", but they may have a look on their faces that could be interpreted that way. As long as they have a supply of food, clean water, shelter from the weather, and protection from any temperature extremes, they have no reason to complain. I don't think they're pining for lost motherhood the way a woman would if she were in the same situation. I think they more or less obey their hormones, and the voices only they can hear in their heads, and this time in the Broody Buster is a time of transition, of changing the channels.
After 2-3 days I do let my hens out briefly, to see if they've changed their minds. If they hang with their flock & stay away from the nest boxes, I know their mood has broken. But if they just take a hasty drink & a few quick bites and then zoom back to the nest boxes, I put them right back in the Buster.