- Jul 19, 2011
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Also since they are free range, one hen still has five but one has 3 (lost two somewhere) The hen that had her clutch away from the flock still has her original six. I hope this helps some.
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Also since they are free range, one hen still has five but one has 3 (lost two somewhere) The hen that had her clutch away from the flock still has her original six. I hope this helps some.
Also since they are free range, one hen still has five but one has 3 (lost two somewhere) The hen that had her clutch away from the flock still has her original six. I hope this helps some.
The funny thing about the two hens hanging together is that the chicks are all mixed up but then when one of the mom's takes off after a bug or something, a couple go right after her and then the rest look around like, "where's mom?" and then they follow. That is when the two clutches will seperate. The chicks seem to keep to their own Mom. I really like the idea of putting up a piece of cardboard between them. I originally seperated mine to boxes right next to each other. I found them switched a couple of times, but in the last week before hatch, they kept to one box a pieace. I have two new hens that just started sitting. One is a white rock and the other is a buff rock banty.
When I check on them they sit real still and give me the stink eyelike "leave me alone, i'm broodin here!"![]()
The problem we had with multiple broodies is that they would end up smashing the eggs by kicking them out of the nest while they were all trying to sit in the same nest! In the end we had to more two of the broodies to completely different pens for them to have some peace.
The seem to go stupider when they go broody! Never letting them hatch out eggs when more than two are broody again, its was a nightmare!