Sydney Acres
Songster
Greetings
This is a very lengthy thread and I've waded through considerable amounts of information!!
I'm searching for specific info and my search terms for this thread are not yielding the answers I'm looking for--may I trouble you folks with some questions?
Disclaimer: I do not currently have chickens but am gathering information and learning as much as possible before taking the leap....please, please feel free to offer any additional advice that will assist me
I would like to have hen raised chicks and am considering game hens as broody's (probably only 3-4 hens). I need someone to walk me through the setting/hatching scenario with multiple hens, specifically game hens if you can speak from personal experience. My concerns are centered around aggressive behavior against chicks. I have plenty of time to design a coop and intend to have an area that can be enclosed and then sectioned into smaller "nurseries" for the sitting and hatching. My hope is that within a couple of days of hatching I could release the hens and their chicks back into the flock without any chick killing happening. I do have a large coop/pen and permanent "paddock" planned (15'x15' and 50'x85' respectively) with additional ranging areas available and will not be hatching more than what is required by my family's table so overcrowding shouldn't be an issue.
edit to add that I'm considering game hens for what I've read is considerable broodiness and their exceptional mothering and foraging skill. If there a different breed that can offer said qualities please let me know.
Does this sound like a logical set up?
Thoughts, advice, opinions, experiences...bring it!
Thanks,
M
I will start with a disclaimer that I do not have game hens, and do not know anyone with game hens, but agree that their reputation is aggressive compared to other breeds, both towards their chicks and each other.
The main breeds that I think of when I think of broody hens are Silkies, Cochins, and Dorkings, although I'm sure many other breeds would also fit the bill. The reason I think of these three breeds is not their parenting skills or their willingness to maintain a brood once they enter it, both of which are quite good, but I think of these breeds because of their reliability at entering a brood. For people who like to incubate instead or brood, some would say their annoying frequency at entering a brood, as it can be difficult to get high volumes of eggs from them when they're brooding more often then laying.
If I were setting things up as you are, which I think is really well organized and I'm quite envious at your forethought, I would not be concerned about exceptional mothering skills, as almost all good broodies have exceptional mothering skills, and would fight to the death to protect their chicks. Obviously, if there is a breed that has a reputation of poor mothering skills, I would cross that off my list, but for most broodies exceptional mothering skills is a given. It's something that all breeders of heritage breeds say about their chosen breed, because natural reproduction is an important part of being "heritage."
I would, however, be concerned about excessive aggression, not just towards chicks but around chicks. A hen that is out with her chicks in the main flock needs to protect her chicks from actual danger, but should not be starting fights because she is naturally aggressive. Small chicks can easily be trampled and killed or injured by fighting adults and bystanders who are fleeing the fight, so a mother who can maintain a protective presence without actually coming to blows will keep the chicks safer than one that attacks when it's not necessary. Also, chicks learn from their mother, so a calm breed mothered by an aggressive breed may not turn out as calm as they should. Personally, I would not consider a broody that has an increased risk of killing a chick, regardless of what steps I might be able to take to control the situation. If the purpose of having a broody is to raise chicks, what good does it do to hatch them if they're going to be killed before they can reach adulthood? "Exceptional mothering" is useless if the mothers only protect the chicks from others, but then kill the chicks themselves, or create unsafe situations that cause the chicks to be killed by others.
Depending on how you set things up, foraging skills may or may not be extremely important. If you only have 3-4 birds that will be brooding 2-3 clutches a year, then foraging skills might not be that big an issue. It's not that many birds. They just need to be good enough at foraging to teach their chicks, but not necessarily good enough to decrease your feed bill, since there's so few of them and they're your "specialized employees." They don't necessarily need to meet all the survivability requirements of your general flock, as long as they're not at increased risk of predation or lack vigor. (Kind of like a priest or a doctor in the Army -- they're just there to do a specific job, not to carry weapons and fight, so they don't need extensive combat training like the other soldiers.)
If I were approaching this broody issue, I would go in one of two directions -- either get a breed that is frequently, annoyingly broody to do a very specific job within the flock and not worry about its other skills, or I would get a breed that I really like in general and search out a particularly broody strain. (There can be quite a difference between lines and between individuals within the same breed. I have seven Barnevelder hens from the same line. Five have never gone broody. One goes broody like an average broody hen, but will maintain the brood for months if nothing hatches and I don't break her brood. One goes broody with such a deep trance that she has to be tube fed daily or she will die of dehydration before she starves to death, and does not come out of the trance at all unless I rub ice cubes on her cheeks, which I need to do to get her to stand up and poop, as no amount of harassment, including tube feeding, will wake her up. She will maintain that depth of brood for months if I didn't break her brood -- she is actually the reason I've gotten so efficient at breaking broods, as she is quite stubborn, and goes broody quite frequently.)
Or you could get Dorkings, which have all the qualities that you're looking for, but I may be a bit nearsighted about my favorite breed!
Additional disclaimer: For those of you that love gamehens, I'm not trying to discredit them. I don't know anything about them, so can't say whether they're wonderful or horrible for this purpose. I'm just trying to draw a logical conclusion from the information given to me. I apologize ahead of time if I offended anyone, as that was not my intent.