Raise your hand (wing?) if you let 'em sleep in the nest box!

ThePhoebeFive

My good opinion once lost, is lost forever.
14 Years
Apr 7, 2011
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South Carolina
I see all these posts about moving pullets who like to sleep in their nest boxes/nest shelf every night until they get the hang of sleeping on roosts. My girls are 23 weeks old, and ever since I moved them outside at 10 weeks, all 7 plus the roo have slept in the nest shelf. They learned to lay eggs there, and with my kids mucking out the shelf a couple times a week, the eggs stay mostly clean. I didn't know about teaching them to sleep on the roosts until it was too late. I guess I just need a few encouraging shout-outs from others who let their chickies sleep wherever they want and deal with a few tiny poo spots on the eggs. Anyone? Please?
 
Nope, I even kick out my mama hen with her two chicks now that they are fully feathered.

No poo on my eggs!
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Be firm- you are the head hen, lol.
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JMO by the way and I'm teasing about trying to tell YOU what to do. To each his/her own, I say!
 
nest box needs to be the cleanest part of the coop. Remember eggs are porous. By the time you see a poop spot on the outside the pathogens are already in the egg. Also if one of your hens goes broody there will be a fight and probably broken eggs at night when they want to go to bed. There are many other very good reasons we dont let chickens sleep in the box
 
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So, how do I teach them at this point? The nest shelf is high in the coop (trying to create that dark, private atmosphere...) Would moving the nest shelf down to below the highest perch do it? Or am I really going to have to sneak in there after dark and haul their fluffy little butts down to the roosts every night?!
 
I just got through doing that cause I moved the roosts around when I cleaned today. 3 were sleeping on the edge of the nest, milk crate, boxes. I moved the die hards to an empty, and I emphasize empty roost higher that the crates. I'll see what happens tomorrow. lol
 
You can try blocking off the nest boxes at night so they can't sleep in there, just be sure you wake up early enough to open them back up for early birds to lay their eggs.
Then you can try putting them up on the roosts at dusk when it's still light enough for them to see but not so light that they'll want to hop down and sleep on the floor. It's going to be a pain, but it's better than dirty eggs.
 

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