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All you ladies with baby fever should become doulas! The miracle of birth without doing it yourself!! My 3rd just turned 6 months, I think I'm complete, but I have a feeling I'll get the itch around 30, because I'm a glutton for punishment!!
Reason I came is to vent my impatience, my little pekin Cho has been red for weeks, and nothing, 23 weeks old so surely she can't hold out much longer. Cho and Ginny are the eldest of my girls but I'm at the point where I reckon the Sussex will probably lay first, they are about 18 weeks but combs are still small and light
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All you ladies with baby fever should become doulas! The miracle of birth without doing it yourself!! My 3rd just turned 6 months, I think I'm complete, but I have a feeling I'll get the itch around 30, because I'm a glutton for punishment!!
Reason I came is to vent my impatience, my little pekin Cho has been red for weeks, and nothing, 23 weeks old so surely she can't hold out much longer. Cho and Ginny are the eldest of my girls but I'm at the point where I reckon the Sussex will probably lay first, they are about 18 weeks but combs are still small and light
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All you ladies with baby fever should become doulas! The miracle of birth without doing it yourself!! My 3rd just turned 6 months, I think I'm complete, but I have a feeling I'll get the itch around 30, because I'm a glutton for punishment!!
Reason I came is to vent my impatience, my little pekin Cho has been red for weeks, and nothing, 23 weeks old so surely she can't hold out much longer. Cho and Ginny are the eldest of my girls but I'm at the point where I reckon the Sussex will probably lay first, they are about 18 weeks but combs are still small and light
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It is best to wait two weeks before setting eggs under her. 40 is fine for hatching chicks. She will keep the eggs and the chicks plenty warm.So ladies, I'm going to throw some newb questions your way. Here we go.
This morning, Midge growled and bit me when I opened the nest box and petted her while she was inside. I have not heard her growl since she was broody before, even though I have bothered her on the nest many times. I put an egg next to her and she ignored it unti I shut the lid, then she tucked it in. I put her on the ground and she sat there for a few seconds, then ran off toward the run door. When I let her in, she went right up into the coop again (she was in the favorite nest so someone had jumped in there during the minute or so she was gone lol). I left her alone then and went in the house. A half hour later she came out and is now out with the others in the run. She did lay today. I know she did not sleep in the box.
I was planning on incubating some eggs for a friend starting a week from today. I have also told myself that maybe if someone went broody I would let her sit and hatch them herself, in order to be able to watch a mom with chicks because it's so darn cute and also to eliminate the stress I personally feel when incubating eggs and thermometers and thermostats and temps and humidity...oh the stress! Just let the bird do it, right?
So here are my questions. Starting with I'm not even sure she's going to go broody. She might but she didn't stay in the nest this morning. Last time it took her about a week or goofing off and sitting in there for progressively longer times before she went full on. So she might not be. Moving on. I don't really have the setup where I can separate her. If I were to let her sit, she would more or less have to stay in the coop. I could separate them possibly if/when chicks hatch but I can't really keep midge by herself right now. I do have a little pen I could use but for the most part she has to stay in the coop because it's just too cold and bringing her in the house is not an option.
This brings me to my next point. How cold is too cold to hatch chicks? These boogers, if we do this, will hatch the first week of April. It'll probably still be in the 40s then and possibly colder. It will still drop below freezing regularly, and frost is a given. I know mom keeps them warm but is that took cold? I don't plan on keeping them for a long time. I'd basically be giving my friend her chicks as soon as she can take them. Maybe I'd leave a couple with her for a bit longer but I can't have more chickens where I'm at now so at a fairly young age the chicks would have to go.
Is that mean? Will she be sad?
Sorry for all the questions. The broody stuff is new to me. If I was putting them in the bator, I'd know just what to do.