- Thread starter
- #11
- Jun 19, 2014
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Thanks for all the input!! I will have to make some accommodations!
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I have two hens that are laying on approximately 10 eggs each in a nesting box. They were laid by different hens in the flock and they were all days apart from each other. The two hens have been sitting on them loyally. I went out and candled them tonight and it looks like 5-6 are going to hatch any minute. The others look like they are developing they are days behind. Once the eggs hatch do I just leave the babies in the nesting box with the hen? They are up in the air...how will the babies get food and water? Could I put all the babies under one hen and let the other hen lay on all the eggs? Also, should I remove the eggs that look like duds or leave them in the nesting box? I need help ~ I obviously don't know what I am doing...
As Ruby said, Mamas are able to get their babies down. You could put a bale of hay, or even several flakes of hay in front of the nest box for a softer landing. And as SJT says, you might benefit from moving all of the "gonna hatch right away" eggs under one Mama, and put the "not just yet" eggs under the other Mama. In the excitement of the hatch, Mama #2 may abandon her nest to help with the first hatchlings. So, no matter what you do, they will have their own game plan. If you are wanting to increase your flock size, you could get an incubator, and finish off any late entries with that, but then you'll have to complete the brooding process on your own, without Mama broody help. You might want to read up on the Mama heating pad brooder in that case. I wish you the best.If there is a lip that is more than 1.5 inch high at the front of the box you can leave them . Although is is not good to move eggs in the last few days before hatch if you don't have the ready to hatch under 1 hen and the less ready under the other they will probably get off whatever eggs are left 2-3 days after first hatch for each of them.
If there are no lips on the front of the nests I would put the ready eggs and whichever hen has been sitting longest on the floor somewhere.
Either way you will need a nest at or near ground level with a bit of a ramp for the hens and chicks to live in for the first few weeks.
There is a big lip 1.5 inches high on the nesting box - it is just so high up and one chick has hatched and she is still sitting on the other eggs...I did move eggs that are furthest along to the momma that just hatched the egg and the others are with the other chicken which should take longer. I am just worried about how momma and baby are going to get out of the box because it is high up. I was thinking after the other eggs hatch maybe I could move them to ground level? I guess if she quits sitting on the eggs I could move them to the other chicken?
Setup up a second nest, possibly on the floor and at least 5 feet away from current nest. Transfer near hatching eggs and hatchings to new nest leaving other hen with less developed eggs / embryos. Second hen hopefully will remain with location while hen moved will have imprinting process coming with two-way communication with older embryos / hatchlings to keep her in the new location. Once I have a clutch where chicks make sounds within egg, I can move the nest without issue and keep hen with nest and brood. Attempting to move nest prior to that can result in hen trying to go back to original nest location and thus abandoning the moved nest / clutch.
The problem with moving nest at that stage is that is the only point in the process that the eggs must stay warm. You have a good chance of killing many of them and thier is absolutely nothing wrong with leaving right where they are until the mama gets the first chicks out of the nest.