Mama Hen Archives - http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/tag/mama-hen/ Fri, 12 Apr 2024 18:45:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/cropped-logo-square1-32x32.jpg Mama Hen Archives - http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/tag/mama-hen/ 32 32 2014 Mama Hen Hatch #2 http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/2014-mama-hen-hatch-2/ Thu, 10 Jul 2014 20:44:12 +0000 http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/?p=457 MAMA HENS Once again a Black Copper Marans hen went broody. Last time a BCM went broody the outcome wasn’t great, but I decided to give them another shot at motherhood. The broody hen made her nest box in a black plant container in their coop, certainly not an ideal place for a chick. Not …

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MAMA HENS

Once again a Black Copper Marans hen went broody. Last time a BCM went broody the outcome wasn’t great, but I decided to give them another shot at motherhood.

The broody hen made her nest box in a black plant container in their coop, certainly not an ideal place for a chick. Not long later another hen went broody and thought the same nest box seemed like a good place to sit.

Then, a third BCM hen went broody. Of course, opting to sit on the same eggs as the other two broody ladies.

2014 hatch mama2 broody

As my estimated hatch day was getting closer I told Farmer John we needed to do something about the 3 sitting hens. I didn’t think it would go well for the babies to have 3 hens trying to be mama.

Well, my estimation was a few days too late. One morning I checked on the 3 pack in the nest box and noticed a chick.

Our plan was to take two of the hens off the nest and to separate them from the one hen designated to be mama and the chicks.

 

2014 hatch mama2 broody2
Farmer John setting up netting as an attempt to separate the chick. We chose one hen to be mama & put the other two outside in the run.

 

At bedtime we let the other 2 back in the coop hoping they would hop on the roost. Of course, they didn’t. And by the next morning the other two snuck into the netted area and were back on the nest box. I pulled back the netting & promptly tossed two hens back outside.

I needed to move the chick out of the nest box so it could reach food & water. So, I moved mama, baby & eggs to the ground on a pile of straw. As I was doing that I noticed a second chick. Unfortunately, it had a wonky leg. I don’t know if it hatched that way or was the result of having too many broodies in the nest.

This mama wanted nothing to do with the wonky-legged chick. The two broodies outside, though, were clucking away, so the chick hobbled and drug itself trying to get closer to the mamas that seemed to care. Truth is, its leg was so bad I knew it wouldn’t make it. But, I wasn’t anticipating what happened next.

I decided that maybe if I gave this chick to the two mamas outside that they would leave the one inside alone & focus on the chick they had. Wrong.

As soon as I placed the chick outside, those two bitches came over and started pecking it to death. I’ve never seen anything like, nor do I care to see it again. They were ruthless. I grabbed the chick, but not before it got a number of good pecks. I just assumed that since they were sitting there while it hatched that they would take it in as their own. Nope. I don’t know if they knew it wasn’t quite right & that was nature’s way of dealing with it. Or, if our BCM’s just aren’t meant to be mama’s.

 

2014 hatch mama2 broody3

We didn’t have a good solution to keeping the chick and any others that hatched safe from the craziness of three broodies. So, I took the chick & eggs away.

I put the one chick in with some other chicks that were a couple weeks old.

And, put the remaining eggs in the incubator. Four eggs hatched & appear to be doing just fine.

 

2014 hatch mama2 chicks

My lesson learned here is that if I’m going to let a mama hatch chicks then I need to let nature take its course and stop interfering. I’m not sure the interfering is doing the chicks any favors… Or, who knows maybe it would have ended up worse. I just don’t know.

 

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2014 Mama Hen Hatch #1 http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/2014-mama-hen-hatch-1/ Fri, 09 May 2014 20:30:04 +0000 http://www.ridgetopfarmandgarden.com/?p=454 MAMA HEN One of our Black Copper Marans had gone broody & was doing quite a good job sitting on her eggs. The only problem was that the other hens kept wanting to lay their eggs where she was sitting. So, she wasn’t able to sit on all the eggs all the time. A few …

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MAMA HEN

One of our Black Copper Marans had gone broody & was doing quite a good job sitting on her eggs. The only problem was that the other hens kept wanting to lay their eggs where she was sitting. So, she wasn’t able to sit on all the eggs all the time.

A few weeks prior we moved the ducks from their pen to the garden. So that left the duck pen empty & we moved the broody hen & 6 eggs to that pen.

For the first few hours, Ms. Broody paced back & forth in the pen not liking her move. Eventually she settled down & sat on the eggs. Once she sat, she rarely got up.

I wasn’t exactly sure when the eggs would hatch, or if they would hatch. But, I had a date in mind that I thought would be close to hatch day.

As my hatch day guess got closer, I kept a closer eye on the happenings in Ms. Broody’s nest. The day I thought they could hatch I peeked in and saw a fluffy, spry chick!

 

2014 Hatch Mama1 chick
All was happy in my mind after seeing that chick.

 

An hour or two later I went back to check on them and found a squashed chick under the new Mama. I didn’t see the fluffy, spry guy.

Later, Farmer John pulled the dead chick out from Mama. He didn’t see the fluffy, spry guy.

I went on with my day, taking kids to their activities. By the time I got home I decided I should take the rest of the eggs from Mama. I don’t know why she stepped on the chick. Was it purely an accident or was she just not good Mama material? So, Farmer John & I grabbed the 4 remaining eggs & put them in the incubator. We didn’t see the fluffy, spry guy.

The next morning I was shocked to see Mama and a chick wondering around the pen. Apparently 2 eggs had hatched. We never saw the chick alive that ended up dieing. And, the fluffy, spry guy is a master at hiding.

It made sense, though, because I knew she was sitting on 6 eggs. But, when I went to move the eggs there were only 4. I assumed something happened to the missing egg sometime over the couple weeks she was sitting on them. I never caught her off the eggs to get a look at how many she was still sitting on.

2014 Hatch Mama 1 chick2

 

MEANWHILE IN THE INCUBATOR

One Blue Marans hatched with no problems.

A day or two after being in the incubator, an egg began looking odd. Bubbly gross things were coming out of the egg. It was rotten. It began to stink. Just for curiosity’s sake, I took it out of the incubator, placed it in a plastic baggie & broke the egg. Disgusting! It was filled with dark, pukey green liquid & what was once a developing chick. Let me just say it again – Disgusting! This was our first experience with a rotten egg in the incubator. Blech!

That left two more eggs in the incubator. I candled them & they looked different than what I’m used to seeing. But, so did the egg that hatched. I ended up just dumping them because I was getting nervous that maybe they were rotten, too.

2014 Hatch Mama 1 incubator

 

So, 3 out of the 6 eggs hatched. But, only 2 survived.

We had a chick squished to death, a rotten egg & 2 questionable eggs. If every hatch were like this, I would not be a chicken farmer. Thankfully, our hatches typically go much better.

 

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