So I am roughly 5 days into my first broody incubation. I have 9 eggs under 2 hens. I started out with 6 under a cuckoo marans that is 2 years old, on her third time being broody. I put the remaining 3 eggs under a young bantam cochin.
A couple days in, I had noticed that, because the marans has chosen to nest on the bottom row of nest boxes, almost every day she either gets up to get a drink and has her box taken by a hen wanting to lay, in which case she comes back and finds different eggs to sit on. Other times I think she just stretches her legs, sees another nest full of eggs, and chooses to go sit on those. Anyway, I work from home so I've managed to be diligent about checking on her periodically, not only to establish what's going on, but also to move the proper eggs back under her.
The little cochin, on the other hand, is glued into her nest. I've only seen her up once. She did, however, switch nests one time. Same routine, I checked on them, saw her on the wrong eggs, put the correct eggs under her, and she's been on that nest ever since. She now has 6 of the eggs as she seems to be sitting a little more tightly than the marans.
I understand that this is not the ideal scenario. I know that the eggs can get broken is jostled too much by the layers, and I also wonder about the changes in humidity as the hens trade turns over them.
I do plan on candling the eggs within the next couple of days, just to see if anything is taking. Should I be thinking about changing the scenario here? I am not too worried about the cochin, as she is sitting tight and won't let anybody near her. The marans is fierce when the other hens come near her on the nest, but usually once a day she changes nests. I do have a basement in which I have a chicken area. I could move them down there, but I don't have nests. I worry that if I moved them into the basement onto newly built nests, it might be enough to kick them out of their broodiness. Other than the occasional nest swapping, everything is going pretty well.
Should I just keep chugging along? Also, I have been thinking a lot about what I will need to do if and when the chicks hatch. There are warm, dry nests in the coop, and I have enough that there is usually one open on the bottom row for the potential mom and babies. I have a covered run with straw bedding. This is where most of the chickens spend their time during these snowy months. They are free to leave the run as well, but right now the compost pile is the only place to go where there's no snow. Anyway, I just wonder if by March 13 (hatch date) there will be less snow, and therefore less chicken activity within the run, which I imagine would be better for the chicks going on adventures with mom. I could also move moms and babies to the basement for a little while after the hatch, just to give them some alone time. Again, I am not very keen on taking away their chance to go outdoors, their chance to socialize, and I hate for the hens to have to re-establish themselves into the pecking order.
If I can, I'd like to try and let these moms hatch their babies out in their current nests, and raise them with the flock. Does anybody have any thoughts on my situation?