Yes, you can stop a hen from brooding but it takes patience. Daily removal of the eggs laid and gathered by the broody hen. Relocation or removal of the chosen nesting box. The hen will protest, she can be taken out of her nest and forced outside with the rest of the flock. It can take days of repeated action to convince the hen, this is not acceptable behaviour at this time.
no you cant,unless your fridge runs between 12-16 degrees celcius
Four
28 days
The temperature under a broody hen is normally about 100.5 degrees F with a humidity of approximately 55%.
It is always preferable to use a broody hen. Hens don't care where the eggs came from, once they go broody, they will sit on a golf ball. You can put eggs from other birds under the hen. When a brood hen is unavailable then an artificial incubator is the next best thing. Incubators are available from all feed and grain supply stores and on-line for under $100.
A hen who wants nothing more out of life than to set on her (or other hens) eggs is called a "broody hen," and the behavior is called, being "broody".
Remove the eggs. You can replace them with eggs you know are from another bird who was active with a rooster. Your broody hen won't care.
Broody hens do lay eggs. They actually lay one [1] egg every day or two.
yes.
She would happily hatch them out! I know of someone who hatched out ducks under a broody hen. They hatched out healthy but the mother hen was just a little surprised when her 'chicks' began to swim! :-)
An individual hen will go"broody" and will gather a clutch of eggs to brood. These will not always be her own eggs. She will steal them from other hens by rolling them into the nest she has chosen. Unless the hen is broody she will lay her egg and leave the nest announcing loudly to the rest of the flock what she has accomplished. Hens can go broody whether there is a rooster in the flock or not, so no, not just fertile eggs trigger the brooding instinct.
No. A broody hen is a broody hen and will sit on golf balls once the urge to nest takes her. Hens do not instinctively know if the eggs they are brooding are fertile or not. Hens in a chicken coop without a rooster among the flock will still go broody.
A broody hen is the term used when a hen is ready to sit on and hatch eggs, or is already sitting on eggs or has chicks. Basically, a hen in a 'mothering mood'. You can tell she's broody by the deep clucks she makes, her fluffing up her feathers and possibly squawking when anyone (including the rooster) comes near, desire to sit on eggs, and of course, if she already has chicks.
A broody chicken is when a hen decides to sit on her eggs... even if there is no rooster around, and even if the eggs belong to a bunch of random chickens on the flock... they will just sit on the eggs hoping to hatch them out, i guess.