- Aug 16, 2013
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I used to sell around a couple hundred birds a year at the local swaps, point of lay pullets sold to nearby urban areas that couldn't have roosters. I ate all of the unwanted roosters.I had Buff Orpingtons and Black Autralorps through the years, as well as Dorkings, BLRW. They had a tendency to not go broody with any real regularity, not usually early enough to get early spring chicks that come to lay before winter. Some of them quit early, some of them hatch but are poor mothers. Had Silkies long enough to figure out the only thing they were good for was feeding hawks. They could hatch a few, were reliably broody, but you had to use up a brooder space to keep them protected, usually with only a small number of chicks.![]()
My only experience with hatching chicks with a broody has been with a Buff Orpington and a Rhode Island White. I hatch out all of my chicks and I do have an incubator. I have let broody's hatch but I mostly incubate in the incubator. I have a Rhode Island White currently that is broody but I'm not going to let her. Of course Silkies. Most of the time in the spring and early summer is when most of mine that want to brood go broody. There are always exceptions. I have noticed over the years that hatchery birds are less likely to be broody but again there are exceptions. Good luck and have fun...
With the success rates of the above mentioned breeds, I developed a policy of breaking all broody hens and not wasting any perfectly good eggs under one, and using an incubator for all hatching needs. Then I got into gamefowl. I remember my Grandmother always speaking fondly of her game hens.
When I got Asils, I sold my cabinet incubators, my table top incubators, and my brooders. There is no other breed that will come anywhere close. They not only go broody, predictably and reliably, they take chick raising to a whole new level. They don't tolerate things messing with their babies. An asil hen will take on a hawk without hesitation, if he is dumb enough to get near the ground. I have gone out at night and dispatched possums and skunks, and a small coon that got in a pen with an asil hen, they were cowering in a corner trying to protect their eyes in all cases. I have discovered snakes, rats, and once a small possum dead in the pen. And they can keep doing it for most of their life. Had a friend with a hen that hatched out chicks at 17. They can live 25 years.