Old Fashioned Broody Hen Hatch A Long and Informational Thread

my broody with the 2 clutches of eggs is due to start hatching thursday…since we are having really bad weather I think I will take the chicks as they hatch (the first set at least) and then give them back when the other set hatches. she's been having a hard time keeping all 8 under her and Im worried she won't have room for chicks and the eggs at the same time
 
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I took the sheet out and she (hen #4) started to panic, so I put it down and went to get her some of her favorite scratch grains. She became very focused on the bowl, so I was able to get all sides and top of the cage covered. I used an older thin sheet so she wouldn't be in total darkness, but it would be dimmer than normal in the cage. I checked her brood box and found that she had scratched all the "nest toppings," including her two ceramic eggs, into the corner of the box and covered them with straw (thank goodness they weren't real eggs). I rearranged the box while she was eating, re-covered the cage, and left her alone for 20 minutes. When I checked on her again she was happily sitting in her brood box in a broody trance. Hopefully it will last. Hen #1 seems to have been oblivious to the whole issue.

Thank you so much, Fisherlady, for your help. It really made a difference.
I am so glad it is working.... a bit of peace and quiet time may help her settle in. Give her a few days to see if she leaves the nest for food and bathroom breaks and returns to the nest and settles herself back in. If she is able to follow that routine for a few days then you can try her on some real eggs. Make sure to let us know how she does over the next couple of weeks.
 
MY FIRST BABY HAS HATCHED!!
Her name is Betty (aka Black Betty)

She is the offspring of my hen and cockerel, who I hatched from eggs exactly 6 months tomorrow, how strange is that?!

Isn't she beautiful :D



my hen had only been laying eggs for a month, but I couldn't wait any longer! So I just chose 2 of the best looking eggs.
Her sister/brother is just drying off. I had to help them both out as they were so tightly packed in there.
There dad was a black Jersey Giant and mum is a very small Buff Sussex, I think the egg size for a huge breed was a bit of a dodgy one, but worked out brilliant in the end

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So cute!!!!! Congrats!!
jumpy.gif
 
So I have an update on the constantly sitting hen. The coop started to stink and I saw an egg shell in the nest. So I moved the hen to the yard and not only did she foul the nest but one egg broke:sick. Many of the eggs have dried yolk on them as well as the hen. I tried to scrape off the yolk from the eggs, but didn't go as far as scrubbing them clean. I made a new nesting box with new bedding and moved the eggs. She took to the new nest and is still sitting. Should I clean the eggs off more thoroughly? Should I start pulling her off the nest every other day? Are the yolk covered eggs doomed? Help
 
So I have an update on the constantly sitting hen. The coop started to stink and I saw an egg shell in the nest. So I moved the hen to the yard and not only did she foul the nest but one egg broke:sick. Many of the eggs have dried yolk on them as well as the hen. I tried to scrape off the yolk from the eggs, but didn't go as far as scrubbing them clean. I made a new nesting box with new bedding and moved the eggs. She took to the new nest and is still sitting. Should I clean the eggs off more thoroughly? Should I start pulling her off the nest every other day? Are the yolk covered eggs doomed? Help
I've had this happen, and I cleaned them off as best I could without using water. They hatched into beautiful little Easter Eggers, no worse for the incident. Good luck!
 
I am so glad it is working.... a bit of peace and quiet time may help her settle in. Give her a few days to see if she leaves the nest for food and bathroom breaks and returns to the nest and settles herself back in. If she is able to follow that routine for a few days then you can try her on some real eggs. Make sure to let us know how she does over the next couple of weeks.
Update on the two broody Dorkings. Everything is going well. I left hen #4 in the elongated cage with only her nest, food, and water, and covered the entire cage with a light sheet. I checked on her twice a day, and she settled in quite well. Hen #1 has been totally unaffected, as much as I can tell.

After 36 hours, I couldn't see any evidence that hen #4 had left the nest at all, so I got her off the nest and took her into a separate room in the barn. (I know, I'm not supposed to disturb broody hens, and I'm not recommending that anyone else do this, because for many hens it would break their brood. But these hens are extremely tame, handled and loved on daily, and they are very committed broodies once they get going. I like to get them off their nest twice a day, make sure they eat, drink, poop, stretch, flap, play a little, get weighed a few times a week, move the inevitable mucous out of their upper respiratory tract by moving around more than just getting up and grabbing a bite to eat, that sort of thing. I always cover their eggs with a clean, warm towel and bubble wrap immediately after picking the hen up. They stay off for 15-25 minutes, then their "egg timer goes off." It's pretty funny. They'll be in the middle of almost frantic play and then all of a sudden they stop, get a slightly glazed look on their face, puff up and start clucking insistently. When that happens I immediately pick them up and take them to their nest, uncover their eggs, and they make the happiest sounds as they settle back over their nest, tucking each egg into the preferred spot.) Anyway, I lifted her off the nest and took her to the separate room and petted her until she came out of her trance. Wow, she woke up in an almost explosive fit of hunger. Ten minutes of frantic eating, drinking, scratching (I put their favorite treats between two towels to encourage them to scratch and exercise), flapping, flying onto my shoulder and chirping with happiness, cuddling, etc. I was exhausted just watching her. Then she suddenly realized that she hadn't preened in two days and went to work on her feathers like a madwoman! Then more activity, pooping, eating, drinking, then 20 minutes after she was taken off her nest the "egg timer went off." She suddenly stopped, looked very confused, started pacing and clucking, so I picked her up and took her back to her cage. She looked around, saw her ceramic eggs and settled back on her nest with happy sounds and egg nuzzling, then back in her trance.

So at this point everything seems to be going well. I'm thinking I'll remove the sheet over the cage, but otherwise keep everything as is, with hen #4 in the same pen but a separated cage, until after the chicks hatch. If the two hens don't try to fight through the wire once they "wake up," then maybe open the wire holes large enough for the chicks to pass through to see if the hens try to kill each other's chicks (only during supervision, of course). If that goes well, then maybe see if the hens will co-brood in the same pen. That would make things much easier, but of course there's always a risk that chicks will be injured or killed. Does that seem reasonable, or too risky?

On another subject, there have been two posts recently about cleaning eggs in a nest that have been soiled by the contents of a broken egg. One person cleaned them with a minimum amount of water on a washcloth, dried them, and was careful to keep the air sac upright. The other person cleaned them off "as best I could without using water." The person who did waterless cleaning had a full hatch, even though from the post I'm left with the impression that the cleaning was incomplete. The person who used the moist washcloth still has the eggs under the hen, so no addition information there. Other than using gloves or washing your hands thoroughly before handling eggs so as not to introduce any new types of bacteria to the shell, what is the "official" recommendation for when this happens? Have any studies been done on the subject? Is thorough cleaning beneficial, even if it involves water? If water is used, is it best to dry the egg afterwards or does the action of drying disturb the bloom even further? Or is leaving some debris on the eggshell best, because disturbing the bloom is worse than the egg debris, even though the debris is a nutrient source for bacteria? Would the answer be different if the egg was soiled with broody poo vs the contents of a broken egg? Is keeping the air sac elevated important? I'd love to hear what everyone would do (has done) in this situation, and their opinions on the above questions.
--April
 
Hello everyone!
Had a couple questions and this seemed like the perfect place to ask.
One of my girls has decided to go broody for the first time, I made up a little spot for her in the back of the coop with food and water and fresh bedding and was going to move her in tonight; does anyone have tips or anything special that I need to do?
 
Hello everyone!
Had a couple questions and this seemed like the perfect place to ask.
One of my girls has decided to go broody for the first time, I made up a little spot for her in the back of the coop with food and water and fresh bedding and was going to move her in tonight; does anyone have tips or anything special that I need to do?

I usually wait till late evening and keep light at a minimum. Keep her new area dark and quiet for the rest of the night and watch her closely in the morning to see if she is accepting it. I also take a bit of the current nesting material to line the new nest so things still smell familiar to the hen.
Hey there. What should I be feeding a broody mama who is going to have a hatch in a few days?
I like to treat our broodies to a variety of higher protein foods... we do chopped scrambled eggs, often mixed with chopped peanuts or hulled sunflower seeds, in cold weather I will sometimes give rinsed can corn mixed into the eggs (higher calorie)... also possible are cooked oatmeal with either raisins, chopped canned peaches or pears.... chickens love tuna and cooked fish of almost any type and also fine chopped chicken or cooked liver. Most of the meats I mince fine and add into either the oatmeal or chopped scrambled eggs.
I also give them a mix of chick starter and dried meal worms.
 

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