- Dec 9, 2013
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cool idea i should try it with my cortunix quail
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Very interesting! I am going to also keep a watch to see how it goes. May try this next year. I have a styrofoam incubator but I am afraid to use it! Maybe I will do both and see what happens. Wishing you luck and keep posting updates for us!
It is great to see this tread getting members that have been here for a long time with little posting to start talking to us!Seems like a really great experiment. I'd like to know how successful it is. I live in WA state and have a broody hen, others pecked some of her eggs open, so I've moved her into the garage - she sits on the eggs (there's 10) - and three weeks into it we'll see if keeping her isolated will work. She hatched three, one lived before I moved her. I wanted better odds than that. Too sad to lose the chicks. I feed her normal pellets as well as grain and rice daily. She's not moving around other than to shuffle the eggs, but she didn't go out often when she was in with the other birds, so I think it's going well. Like you said, this is all done on faith that it'll be what it's meant to be. I'm hoping for ten healthy chicklets. ~~ Phoenix in WA ~~ Please keep us posted!
I have yet in two years to have a hen go broody on me. I could learn a lot from you. This year, everyone just quit laying and started growing baby feathers, though, and so far I only have one girl laying. I suspect someone might try it this year. I'm wondering, If one goes broody NOT in the hen house(under a bush somewhere etc) should I just drop a dog crate over her to keep her safe? Can I move eggs (like moving her and the nest to a brood box up by the house) and still have her keep them? If one goes broody in the hen house, I plan to add her a couple of eggs and a curtain to make her space off limits(am planning to add split curtains for some privacy anyway).