FluffTheDuck
Duck love is recognizable in any language
Although I (no offense to anybody,) did give those to a Chinese lady and she was so happy! 

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No. As others have said, this is false.If you let her sit to long she might die. but thats only after day 21. If she does not lay eggs for a month she could die.
This.? Occasionally a setting hen will die, but generally it is from a mite infestation that builds up as they are brooding. Not laying eggs for a month will have no impact on a hen.
Only time I've ever had a broody die is when a raccoon got into the coop!
If you don't want her to hatch out chicks, best to break her broodiness promptly.Thank you all for your responses. We candled the eggs and it turned out that they were not fertile. We've also blocked off her nest and taken her outside to try to get her to stop being broody.
Only time I've ever had a broody die is when a raccoon got into the coop! The raccoon wasn't gloating for very long after. My dog tore the thing up.
I think you're confusing this with something else. When you provide false lighting in winter, chickens start laying their eggs more often. If the light suddenly goes out, they're not being stimulated to lay as many eggs, so the ones that they do have get larger and larger until they're very difficult to lay. (Or so I've heard--the statement had no sources.) Finally, these large eggs move into position and get a shell put over them. Then the hen tries to lay them, and sometimes, they're too large and she prolapses or is eggbound.Well if a hen sits on eggs for so long and doesn't lay she can get the eggs stuck inside her. But this hen should be fine as long as she doesn't sit for to long. Good luck!