Congrats! and Good Luck!

Since she is due to hatch on Easter you should join the Easter Hatch-A-Long! https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/949763/the-6th-annual-byc-easter-hatch-a-long
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Congrats! and Good Luck!
Some hens continue to mother until the "chicks" are bigger than they are...my first Silkie was very much that way.I'm curious if this is normal for a broody mom.
Peppers chicks are 6+ weeks. She has laid a egg for 4 days in a row. She still walks with them. Once in awhile she will leave them for about 10 minutes. I'm hoping I have a good broody in my hands. Thanks in advance!
I'm curious if this is normal for a broody mom.
Peppers chicks are 6+ weeks. She has laid a egg for 4 days in a row. She still walks with them. Once in awhile she will leave them for about 10 minutes. I'm hoping I have a good broody in my hands. Thanks in advance!
Thanks so much Barbara.Hi
Firstly, sex links are not usually a broody hen, but that's not to say it's not possible or it doesn't happen.
Secondly, it is unlikely if you have only had her a short while that she would feel settled and secure enough to become broody.
Thirdly, there is a lot more to being broody than lying/hiding in inaccessible places or nest boxes.
I think it may be more likely that she is hiding because she is not feeling comfortable and secure in the hen house or on the roost.
Could it be that your other hens are intimidating or bullying her? Are the hen house and roosts spacious enough to accommodate all the hens in your flock, bearing in mind that they need several square feet each of floor space and at least a foot of roost bar length per bird?
Did you get her as a single hen or did you get several together? It is difficult for a single hen to integrate into an established flock and she may be distancing herself because she feels intimidated even if the other hens are not showing aggression towards her.
Could she be ill? Hens usually stand on their own or hide if they are poorly. When was the last time she laid an egg? Could she be egg bound?
I think you have perhaps been a little optimistic giving her fertile eggs at such an early stage. Even with a proven broody, most people give them a couple of days of exhibiting broody behaviour before they give them eggs they want to incubate. Generally that is sitting tight on the nest day and night... with maybe 30 mins once a day of eating, drinking, doing a massive poop and maybe a quick dust bath before returning to nest. Sometimes they will pluck their breast feathers out to ensure their body heat transfers to the eggs. They often run about making a rhythmic clucking noise like they are counting the seconds until they get back to the nest.... my mother referred to it as "clocking". Sometimes, when they first come off the nest, they are like a whirling dervish crazy chicken.... it's like..."Get out of the way.... big mamma coming through and don't get in my way, cos I haven't got time to get distracted"! ,Often, they will growl if you or other hens approach the nest. They flatten down in the nest, so it is a bit different to a hen that is just in there to lay an egg.
Anyway, I hope my post has given you some food for thought as to what is going on with your hen and I hope you manage to figure it out soon.
Regards
Barbara
j
Had a blast yesterday when I saw these babies under my black sex link/ silkie cross Samantha. Gave her some chick starter and she immediately began showing the peeps how to be little chickens. They're all bantam cochin cross chicks of Samantha and her sister. Just farm yard mutts, but I couldn't be more excited.