Would a hen "rescue" another hen's chicks that were in distress?

Freia

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Strange happenings in the barnyard this morning...

Marilyn is my lovely partridge cochin. She has 3, 3-week-old chicks. Apple is my completely useless buff orpington - she keeps getting egg-bound, and only lays an egg every 2 weeks or so. She's never been broody. She really never does anything but eat and poop.

I went up to the coop this morning, and noticed that I didn't hear the usual peeping and activity from Marilyn and her chicks. So I went looking for Marilyn and the peeps. nothing. Nowhere. Couldn't hear them either. Looked and looked. I saw Apple in the chick-condo. I assumed she liked the nest and was trying to lay an egg. Kept looking. Found Marilyn huddled in the far back most corner under the coop. I reached in there and felt under her, and not a single chick. Couldn't hear or see a peep anywhere.

So then I lifted Apple, and found 1 chick under her, but couldn't find the other 2. Once I gave the chick back to Marilyn, Marilyn started clucking, and then the other 2 came out of hiding from under some dense shrubs. The reunited family is now safe in their condo, but they seem shocked. no one is coming out from the back corner.

Since Marilyn and the peeps were all hiding and being absolutely still and quiet, I assume that something attacked them: cat, dog, hawk. But what I can't figure out is why Apple was sitting on a chick? For a moment I thought that Apple had tried to steal the chicks, but there's no way Marilyn would have backed down from that battle. She's twice Apple's size. So something attacked them. Was Apple trying to rescue the chick? Apple isn't broody. I thought even a broody hen won't sit on chicks unless she's been setting for a few weeks. And most hens will kill a chick that's all alone and isn't theirs.

When I got up and looked out the window this morning, I saw Apple literally flying out of the pen area and across the back lawn. I was thinking Apple must be feeling good. I think something attacked up there. But why would Apple have gone back to sit on a chick that wasn't hers?
 
The strangeness continues...
Marilyn keeps herself and her chicks away from the rest of the flock when they're free-ranging. If I throw out some scratch and another hen gets near Marilyn and the chicks Marilyn will either move on or chase the other chicken away.

Yesterday, the chicks looked hungry out there, so I brought their chick-feeder into the pasture for them to have a snack. Marilyn and the chicks all dug in hungrily. Then Apple came by (she loves baby-food) and I just watched. Apple joined the family at the itty-bitty feeder - 5 butts sticking up in the air, and nobody protested or went away. Another hen came and Marilyn chased her off.

It's as if Apple is the chicks' Aunt or Godmother or something. She isn't trying to steal the chicks. She just seems to really like them, and Marilyn is just fine with it. I think she was actually helping that poor cold, scared chick yesterday. There's more to those little bird-brains than we can imagine, I think.

I told my husband about it, and he just shrugged and said "Well that's Apple for you. She's completely worthless, but there isn't a mean bone in her body".
 
I having an 'aunty chicken' too. Here she is, with big chicks.

The chicks were incubator-hatched, and I didn't have much time for them when they were going out. Little Bull here decided to be their friend. They were dubious of her size to start with, but then appreciated having a bigger sister! I think Little Bull jus wanted some friends who wouldn't pick on her and who would play with her.
I love this photo of them. The box tipped forwards barely seconds after taking it lol
 
Description sounds like a reaction to a hawk. Hens in my experience will not specifically defend each others chicks although a common foe may make it look as such. Some roosters will join hen in defense of brood and sometimes will do so after hen no longer tends same chicks. It is defense against hawks targeting offspring, especially Coopers hawks, that I expect to see multiple adults engaging same foe.
 
You said--" There's more to those little bird-brains than we can imagine, I think."

and I really think that is true. We just don't know all the chicken-think. Someplace, I read that some scientist proved chickens can do deductive reasoning--so it goes beyond instinct.

Never a dull moment sounds like.

Time-out. IF you see this...what is the breed or color pattern of the chicks in your pictures with Little Bull? Amazing that you snapped before the box toppled. :O)
 
They're Vorwerks. That's the only colour they come in and that is the only breed that has that colour. It's black and buff belted, I believe? They're good Winter layers.
 

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