Hi aart, thanks for your reply
In response to your questions, we do have a rooster and have just hatched a batch of chicks with another hen, so he is 'doing what he needs to be doing' if you get my drift! Also, the chicks I'm going to 'give her' are the ones I am hoping she will hatch underneath her. So I can't hurry that up either! I wish I could!
Broody has only been on the nest for one solid day so far (Today being Day 2), so I'm not really concerned about her not eating or drinking yet. Whilst she
has been trying to sit for 3 weeks, but by that I just mean that she continually sneaks back to her nest three or four times during the day (and I keep taking her out - battle of the wills!) - not that she's constantly been sitting. So she shouldn't be at the end of her rope yet either.
I don't think there's anything 'wrong' with her per se. She and the nest have been dusted for mites and lice, the food and water is within five feet of her (she is just in a corner of the main coop) and she has finally gotten her way - I am allowing her to do what she has been wanting to do for weeks!
It was so funny when I gave her the eggs though. She was sitting on plastic ones not wanting to get out - until I came in with the bottom half of a cat carrier. She watched me fill it with fresh soft hay and put it in the darkest corner of the coop. Then I pulled out the 9 eggs I had been saving for her and nestled them in to the nest. I swear, if she had eyebrows, she raised them at that point!
I gently picked her up (growl, growl, puff!) and put her down right in front of the new nest. She was flat as a pancake (a very puffy pancake, that is) and made this strange sooky noise, before she slowly climbed into the nest, turned around, and sat. And that was that.....
I don't quite know why she looks sad. Her behaviour is similar to my previous 2 broody hens (with the growling, the pancake look, and the spiking up of the feathers!) She has always been a sooky hen though, the one who comes running to me when she spies me across the yard, and the only one who would willingly let me pat her. I used to take the opportunity to do this every time she laid an egg - I would take her from the nest afterwards and give her a cuddle, and she seemed to quite like it.
The only thing is....I wonder if she is just sooky now because she can see the other broody hen and her five chicks running around a few metres from her? My last hen watched a batch of chicks being raised too, but maybe this hen is so broody she is just sad because she can see babies but doesn't have her own yet? Just a thought....OR.... it could just be that she is my favourite - my special baby - and I empathise with her too much.
Krista