My little hen Dimple looks like she may go broody again. The last time she was broody I was quarantining a rooster but hadn't added him, so nothing got incubated since there were no fertile eggs. My rooster has been in long enough I'm pretty sure I have fertile eggs - at least I better have some fertile ones with the amount of certain behaviors going on lol. Anyway, Dimple is showing some pre-broody signs once again. Of course she may yet fake me out and not go broody; she has done the pre-broody behaviors many more times in the past without becoming glued to a nest. Still, I'd like to get ready if she does go broody again.
My plan would be set everything up in the house and let Dimple raise the chicks for a while indoors until they're big enough to be safe outside. I know this would inevitably lead to a lengthy re-integration process with the rest of the flock, but it would be very hard for me to make my whole coop and run safe for day-old chicks. I can repurpose the setup I built for my rooster's quarantine to have an enclosure that's about 12 square feet of space on a tarp with pine shavings. I would just need to slap together a nest box for it, which should be easy. Later I can also let them roam my home office during the day like I did when I raised my hens, so space won't be an issue.
I've tried my best to read up on the process of hatching with a broody hen, but I'm still unsure about a few things.
My plan would be set everything up in the house and let Dimple raise the chicks for a while indoors until they're big enough to be safe outside. I know this would inevitably lead to a lengthy re-integration process with the rest of the flock, but it would be very hard for me to make my whole coop and run safe for day-old chicks. I can repurpose the setup I built for my rooster's quarantine to have an enclosure that's about 12 square feet of space on a tarp with pine shavings. I would just need to slap together a nest box for it, which should be easy. Later I can also let them roam my home office during the day like I did when I raised my hens, so space won't be an issue.
I've tried my best to read up on the process of hatching with a broody hen, but I'm still unsure about a few things.
- I want to hatch eggs from a few different hens, but one of them might not be mating much or at all with the rooster. So, 1-2 of the eggs I'd want to try might not be fertile. Does that mean I still need to candle regularly to get rid of bad eggs early on? Or can I just wait and see what hatches?
- I don't have an incubator as a backup option. Is it advisable to have one on hand? Or if Dimple suddenly decided to ditch the nest near the end, would I have enough time to run out and buy one right away without the eggs dying? (I don't want buy one and then never use it if I can avoid it)
- I don't want to hatch very many eggs, just a few really. I know too few eggs is an risk when using an incubator, but is there a minimum number for putting under a broody given that they won't rely on other chicks for warmth if, say, only one of them hatches?