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Oh my gosh - how awful. Poor little chickies. I guess she was really hungry from being broody so long.
Which, all joking aside, is a serious issue with some of my broodies. They sit for so long, I can't break them up, and then they get so run down because they won't get off the nest to eat or drink. I've lost a couple of broodys this way. I just find them dead on the nest and when you pick them up they are skin and bones. So now I go in each pen every day and pick them up and toss them off the nest when I scattering food around and it snaps them out of it long enough to eat. If I didn't, they would just sit there and starve, so afraid to get up because the others might take their spot.
For sure a good broody is worth her weight in gold, but some of them definitely do take it too far! I use my "broody buster" that my hubby built for me - it's got a wire bottom, and no access to the nest box. 3 full days in there, and they are broken of being broody. Works like a charm!
Thanks Wynette - I'll have to try something like that to break them up.
When I do want them to try and hatch their own eggs I do use a dog kennel or cage inside the coop and move the hen and her nest at night. I've found they relax a lot more if locked in their own cage and will then get up to eat and drink once they realize the other hens can't get to their nest. Once the chicks hatch, I open the cage door and let them come and go as they please. I've also discovered the hatch rate is great this way - whereas if left to just sit on a nest that they never get off of causes the eggs to rot and break and she'll still be sitting there in that foul smelling goop refusing to budge.