- Jun 18, 2014
- 522
- 50
- 138
Awww, poor girl, I am glad she made it! I love that name!
Yet another reminder, not to count your chickens before they hatch!

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.
Update on my broody hen hatching project. The hen has never done this before, and neither has her person! On day 23 one chick hatched. Beautiful, healthy perfect baby. We ended needing to move broody due to chicken harassment. Our goal was to move the chick and the eggs to attract "Broody" to stay in the new spot. Then once it looked like she was staying to pull the 'bad' eggs out. I gently moved the chick and the eggs, while hubby held the nearly dangerous hen. When he set her down she charged into the new spot so frantically, she broke an egg. The chick inside was alive.. had broken the membrane but not externally pipped, but not through the shell Where the chick hit the egg the break was at the yoke sack. Lots of blood, goop, and yoke. The chick shuttered a couple of times and left us both miserable when it quit moving and passed. Now Broody is taking care of Genesis, the new chick, as well as back to sitting on the eggs, these are dark shelled eggs and difficult to candle. Plus Broody get very upset when disrupted. The egg disaster happened about 5 hours ago, on day 25... I have heard now so many stories of eggs hatching much later then expected. I thought I would give those eggs through the night hours tonight and tomorrow day. If you think this is a bad plan please tell me. By the way she is a great mom, even while sitting on eggs, she is directing, teaching and ensuring the safety of her beautiful little chick.
Ahh, sorry you lost that chick.... I am doing the first time broody thing too but my friends who have tons o chickens let the mamas sit on all their eggs and they never remove the eggs till the mama has fully given up on them... sometimes a bad one will break but not usually till all the chicks have hatched. So I don't think you need to worry about getting them out... if there is food and water nearby for the chick then they won't have to leave the rest of the eggs.
Now that had me ROFL!Or maybe Harry Pecker! EDIT: Oh god never mind, that sounds wrong...so very, very wrong. ._.
the chicks themselves can be pretty awesome too. I brought 2 day old chicks from the June hatch along into the coop, and put them in a brooder box, after a week I moved them down to a wire cage on the floor, and they have been little houdinis, both are doing well going in and out of the cage, and the other chickens are leaving them alone. warm enough here they haven't needed the brooder light in a few days, everyone is panting, and they are active little chicks too.Thanks for the advice, I keep wanting to remove the other eggs, and something in me says.. Leave them alone, I have them in a Dog Crate right now with food and water and the door open so they can join the flock when ready. She is doing a good job of attending to herself and the chick while sitting on the eggs! Appears nature gave her good Mommy Instinct.
![]()
the chicks themselves can be pretty awesome too. I brought 2 day old chicks from the June hatch along into the coop, and put them in a brooder box, after a week I moved them down to a wire cage on the floor, and they have been little houdinis, both are doing well going in and out of the cage, and the other chickens are leaving them alone. warm enough here they haven't needed the brooder light in a few days, everyone is panting, and they are active little chicks too.
hoping this month's chicks are as well recieved
Oh no.. the mail came.. no eggs! The tracking number hasnt even updated since July 2. Now I am worried.