I just went out to see if I have more eggs and I found my GLW under the table in a little nest she made for herself not wanting to give up her egg. She is still laying pullet eggs. If fact I thought this was her 3rd egg ever. Two days ago, I was cleaning the coop and this Wyandotte, Daisy Mae (will be 23 weeks old on Monday the 29th), just kept looking around and around in and out of all of the nesting boxes, squatting in each corner, and in general desperately trying to find a place to lay. This went on for at least a couple of hours. I was using a tote to put the dirty litter in to take out and after every shovel full she would jump in the tote and try to make a nest. I thought it was her first egg and she just wasn't sure what her instinct was telling her so I kept trying to put her in the nesting boxes and she spun around scratched and came back out and into my dirty bedding tote. We did this dance for quite awhile until I had the clean bedding in. Of course she was in heaven then, and eventually laid an egg in the back corner on the floor bedding. Yesterday she did it again and laid in a big pile of bedding. Then we get to today.
Earlier when I was collecting eggs she was again looking all over the place, in and out of boxes, around each of the corners and in every nook and cranny. I left her to it and went back a couple of hours later with treats for the chickens. She wouldn't come out even for watermelon, so I went in and she has a little nest in the back corner and was turning/examining an egg. When I took a step toward her she threw her body over it. So many questions!!
Is it even possible for her to go broody over her first few eggs? I thought broody was rare in pullets and Wyandottes.
Can these eggs even hatch? (I typed this up and went back after 45 minutes and startled her when reaching to see if she'd let me grab the egg. When she jumped, I snatched the egg. It only weighs 1.48 oz.)
Could she just be curious, trying to figure out what this thing is that she just made?
If I don't allow her to some leeway now to hold on to her eggs, will she just start hiding them from me?
Should I let her do what she wants to for a few days and see if it "sticks"?
For future reference is this want happens before a hen goes broody? Do they start...I guess you'd call it nesting?
I do want my hens to go broody, I got several breeds that are known for it, but I thought I wouldn't have to learn about it until spring since they're so young. I'm not sure what to do. What is the best thing for her? I don't want to break her heart taking them away. I don't really care about losing a few eggs if she tries for a few days and gives up. I'd also hate to see her go through it for weeks only to have them not hatch anyway. Would that ruin her from going broody next year?
Am I just over-empathizing?
Earlier when I was collecting eggs she was again looking all over the place, in and out of boxes, around each of the corners and in every nook and cranny. I left her to it and went back a couple of hours later with treats for the chickens. She wouldn't come out even for watermelon, so I went in and she has a little nest in the back corner and was turning/examining an egg. When I took a step toward her she threw her body over it. So many questions!!
Is it even possible for her to go broody over her first few eggs? I thought broody was rare in pullets and Wyandottes.
Can these eggs even hatch? (I typed this up and went back after 45 minutes and startled her when reaching to see if she'd let me grab the egg. When she jumped, I snatched the egg. It only weighs 1.48 oz.)
Could she just be curious, trying to figure out what this thing is that she just made?
If I don't allow her to some leeway now to hold on to her eggs, will she just start hiding them from me?
Should I let her do what she wants to for a few days and see if it "sticks"?
For future reference is this want happens before a hen goes broody? Do they start...I guess you'd call it nesting?
I do want my hens to go broody, I got several breeds that are known for it, but I thought I wouldn't have to learn about it until spring since they're so young. I'm not sure what to do. What is the best thing for her? I don't want to break her heart taking them away. I don't really care about losing a few eggs if she tries for a few days and gives up. I'd also hate to see her go through it for weeks only to have them not hatch anyway. Would that ruin her from going broody next year?
Am I just over-empathizing?