How can I make my chicken go broody?
Posted by Fiona Nevile in Chickens | 344 commentsEvery now and then I get an email from someone who desperately wants a chicken to go broody. Going broody means that the hen suddenly fancies raising a brood of chicks and will sit on the eggs constantly to incubate them until hatched.
You can’t make a hen go broody. It’s like trying to make X more amusing, or sexy. Either X has the tendency to be amusing or sexy or does not.
If you want to breed chicks you need an incubator or a broody hen. There are strains that have a tendency to go broody. Bantams (a small breed of chicken) are well known to be more prone to broodiness. They can be great mothers. Despite this tendency, we have six bantams and only two have gone broody over the past three years.
I have been told that Silkie bantams go broody at the drop of a hat. Some pals that had a shoot and raised pheasant eggs, used Silkie bantams with great success. But you could buy a flock of Silkies that never go broody. It’s the luck of the draw.
Mrs Boss is the one bantam chicken in our flock that goes broody regularly. Her comb gradually pales from red to pink and she will sit in the nesting box, caring for any eggs that have been laid. She is not bothered about the progeny and will happily sit on anything as long as it’s egg shaped.
It’s important to check your chickens every day and lift a broody hen off the nest. Left sitting, a broody hen may not move. If not shunted out of the nesting box to eat and drink, she will die. The sad fact is that without a cockerel to fertilise her eggs, an undisturbed broody hen will pointlessly sit on a nest of unfertilised eggs indefinitely.
If you have fertilised eggs and want to breed, a broody chicken is a boon. Settle her in a quiet place with her own supply of food and water. She will get up every now and then to stretch her legs but she will care for her eggs.
A bantam will generally be a good mother. Any sitting hen connects with any chick when she hears the first cheep. A hen sitting on eggs will generally accept all fowl that emerge from an egg that is placed under her. This could be a pheasant, guinea fowl, partridge, quail, duck or chicken. We haven’t tried ostrich or peacock (it’s a question of space).
It’s important to provide a safe environment, well away from the rest of the flock. Chickens do not go all gooey eyed when new, trembly legged chicks emerge. There is a pecking order. Need I say more?
Mother and chicks retire earlier than the other chickless hens each evening and so need a separate apartment for the first few weeks. Initially, the mother hen teaches the chicks how to drink, forage and run from danger (under her protective wing) from the word go.
Think laterally and protect your precious chicks from danger. A large stone in the drinking saucer will stop them drowning in the water. You also need to check that bullying is not going on. If this is happening, fence off the separate apartment.
I am very fond of Mrs Boss. Heaven knows why – she is broody on and off all summer. Her broodiness is a problem for us. It affects the rest of our small flock. Broody hens will chase other normal egg-laying hens out of the nesting box. Egg production goes down.
I have learnt that leaving Mrs Boss to her own devices is a downward spiral. She will not give up. She is resolute and single minded unitil I escort her to the prison cell broody coop. Now I clean out the broody coop and pop her in as soon as I spot her comb going pale. I feel a pig but if I catch her early in her broody state, her stay at Her Majesty’s Pleasure is just a matter of days.
She puts in a vociferous High Court appeal every time I pass by the run and her broody coop cell. This is ignored until her comb turns red again. Then the prison doors are thrown open and she rushes out for a dust bath.
If anyone needs a broody hen I would gladly lend Mrs Boss, although I would miss her because it takes three to four months to hatch and nurture a brood until they are old enough to fend for themselves.
My dream is that one day we will be offered fertilised eggs around the time that Mrs B is going broody. There was a fleeting hour or so this spring when someone needed to hatch out some duck eggs.
“Do you have a broody hen?”
“Well, yes. Mrs Boss.”
“I might bring round some duck eggs.”
Danny had a happy day imagining baby ducks swimming in a teeny pond (upturned dustbin lid in the chicken run.) Mrs Boss hovered in the nesting box. Finally we had the call. No duck eggs. Mrs Boss was popped into the broody coop and egg laying by the other hens erupted for the day. Chickens save up and the shells are harder.
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Sorry about the *more on* bit at the end of last post, i dunno how that got there!
Hi, sorry i havent been posting, homework was crazy last week.
The chicks are fine, scratching about in their run, well, cupboard.
i have cat litter for a floor, and i got a chick waterer, its great!
Their getting bigger very slowly and they are soooooooo cute!
My sisters love them.
As for the lambs, i am getting two sheep with four lambs between them on the 15th march at worcester market.
Am currently piling straw into the barn, making it softer, then piling more on ready for them.
Its actually quite hard work.
Hope you and your animals are well!
James
more on
Hi Andi Marie
I am wondring too!
hello james
just woundering if you got your pet lamb and what kind did you get.how r the chicks doing
Hi Shannon,
That’s such a lovely story, thanks for sharing!
We have friends who raise sheep so last spring I asked if I could buy one of their baby lambs for a pet. They said that if I wanted to bottle feed an orphine I could have one. I told them that would work. Iwaited about two weeks before I got a phone call. The mother hadn’t died, she just decided that she had better things th o do than to raise a baby.”Smokey” was 3 days old when I went and picked him up. Soooooo cute!!!!!!! Now he is 10 months old, and weights about 100 pounds! He only weighted aprox. 7pounds when I got him. He is alot of fun, follows my 4 year old daughter around everywhere.
hello james
thats great news hun what kind were they. as for the lambs wow i have just aquired about 20 sheep to lmb this year with many of then being triplets so there maybe 1 or two pet lambs up here too.
Hi James
That’s great news. Delighted that you have chicks – hope everything goes OK.
I’d love to hear how you get on with the lambs!
Hi, yes, the chicks hatched yesterday!!! what a surprise, my family were sceptical after the last batch.
Four little furry bundles of fun when i arrived home last night, tomorrow i hope it snows me in so i can spend the day teaching them to drink and on saturday to eat.
Also on saturday i am going to persue my next plan, i am going to worcester livestock market to hopefully puchase some lambs even if it is a little early in the season.
My gran says i should get a cow first but im starting slightly smaller.
James.
P.S. hope your chicks work out for you!
Hi James
Have you got chicks yet?
Thanks for help on the candling.