I just have a question regarding broodies and what you would do in this situation.
I have three Araucana broodies. I would like them to raise chicks, means I don't have to! Two have been broody before (recently) and stopped caring for the chicks to go back to brooding wooden eggs. Frustrating, to say the least! One of the two failbroodies is sharing a box with a first time broody. The other failbroody is alone in a different box. They are small birds despite being large fowl, so they can easily fit two fluffy butts in one box, where as my black copper marans and australorp are fat fluffy and fit just themselves!
ANYWAY! What would you do? Let 'em have another go at being Moms? Maybe those two didn't have it in gear when they got chicks last time? They didn't actually HATCH the chicks, I did so in my incubator, and once they were dried off, at night, replaced the wooden eggs with chicks. I guess I should let them hatch the eggs themselves, might help them get the idea. And how do you think the two sharing the nest box will cooperate with hatching chicks? They seem to regularly steal the wooden eggs from each other, they always have at least one, but the extras switch hens. Like if one goes for a drink, the other will stuff them under her.
I have three Araucana broodies. I would like them to raise chicks, means I don't have to! Two have been broody before (recently) and stopped caring for the chicks to go back to brooding wooden eggs. Frustrating, to say the least! One of the two failbroodies is sharing a box with a first time broody. The other failbroody is alone in a different box. They are small birds despite being large fowl, so they can easily fit two fluffy butts in one box, where as my black copper marans and australorp are fat fluffy and fit just themselves!
ANYWAY! What would you do? Let 'em have another go at being Moms? Maybe those two didn't have it in gear when they got chicks last time? They didn't actually HATCH the chicks, I did so in my incubator, and once they were dried off, at night, replaced the wooden eggs with chicks. I guess I should let them hatch the eggs themselves, might help them get the idea. And how do you think the two sharing the nest box will cooperate with hatching chicks? They seem to regularly steal the wooden eggs from each other, they always have at least one, but the extras switch hens. Like if one goes for a drink, the other will stuff them under her.