Point of Lay (abbr. POL)
roster
Texas and forty five days
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".
They sit in the hen house on eggs, on the roost or in a nest.
Your hen has gone "broody". This means she is ready to incubate the clutch of eggs she has gathered and will sit on them for the next 21 days. She will remain on the clutch until the eggs ( or most of them) have hatched unless you remove the eggs from under her.
Yes and what you can do to see if there is any eggs under the hen is you can take a stick and lightly lift the hen up and see if there is any eggs under her!
Yes. they both do. But their eggs are very different. While the hen's eggs have a hard outside the frogs eggs are very soft. Also a hen doesn't lay nearly as many eggs as a frog. Also frogs eggs are in the water, while a hen lays them on land.
There are several physical signs that a young hen is ready to lay eggs. The most noticeable signs are the red comb and wattle and the hen will squat often as if she is waiting for a rooster.
The hen will lay eggs either way, she will lay more if you have a rooster and the eggs will be fetilized
sit on the eggs
It takes on the average 25 hours for a hen to form an egg once she is in laying season. They DO NOT carry their eggs around inside them for any extended period of time! A good laying hen should produce as a target 305 eggs per year IF she is given adequate lighting.
If you mean hen's eggs, unfertillised eggs are what are sold in your local supermarket. Fertillised hen's eggs you should be able to get from a local farm.