let them air dry
Well, if they are MAD you should stay away from them, you know the saying "madder than a wet hen!" Humour aside I suggest you do nothing. Hens do not enjoy being wet, they will however, give up "dry" comfort for "wet" free range. Worms are available during summer rains and that is a good thing for free range hens, yum! Yum! Hens are in fact a good way to know if the weather is going to be dull and rainy all day or if the rain coming down is just a shower soon to end. Hens will run for the nearest shelter during a short rain but if it is going to rain all day they will venture out and suffer the wet feathers. Trying to dry the hens is simply futile. Wet chickens will preen and dry their own feathers once they roost for the night.
Supply a shelter. It does not have to be elaborate. A simple waterproof tarp over some bales of straw will suffice to break the wind and rain. If momma hen has nested in the open then you must move all of them to a new place with some shelter, or build a shelter over the nest.
i put mine under a heat lamp and let it dry off
Brood hens hatch chicks. A brood is a collection of baby chicks hatched by one hen.
A hen sits on and hatches a clutch of eggs; when they are hatched they are simply a flock.
A parent chicken is commonly a female chicken known as a hen that has hatched chicks. The parent chicken will protect the young chicks at all times.
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! :-)
Just let her be. The newly hatched chicks will take up some of momma's time and the room under her but the mother hen will adjust things by herself. Trying to do this for her will just stress her out and may cause her to leave the nest. The new chicks will find room under her wings eventually and mother hen will roll the unhatched eggs closer together.
Chickens do not feed their young. Chicks are hatched knowing how to eat and drink. Newly hatched chicks do not need food or water for up to 72 hours after they emerge from the shell, they will dry out, fluff up and start to explore their surrounding under the watchful eye of the mother hen. After a day or two they will venture out of the nest and search for food without the mothers help.
Definitely NO because hens egg is chicks before hatching and when hatched when it grow up it is already rooster if the chick is a boy but if it is a girl it is a hen..
There are a lot of reasons TO TAKE the chicks from the hen. However, it is kind of fun to watch the hen with her chicks, if you have the room to isolate them from the flock.A few reasons to take chick from hen:Make sure chick gets adequate nourishmentKeep chicks safe from larger birdsKeep chicks isolated for their protectionReduce exposure of chicks to avian diseases/viruses/bacteria until they are older and able to handle the exposure
Many chicks are artificially incubated and have no "parents" in that sense of the word. Chicks that are hatched under a hen will remain close to the hen as part of the flock for as long as they live. Chicks introduced to the flock at about 3 or 4 months old are assimilated into the flock within hours.
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.
Many chicks never know their mother. Most chicks are artificially incubated and are raised in a brooder with other chicks their own age. Chicks hatched by a broody hen in the chicken coop often stay with "mom" until they are full grown at the age of 6 to 8 months old and will often stay with "mom" all their lives. This is basically just for companionship as the mother hen does not feed her chicks, they are born knowing how and what to eat.
If the chick is hatched by the hen no. She takes care of everything. If incubator than yes. Chicks have to be kept warm and have fresh water and medicated chick starter available at all times and kept safe and away from the other chickens.