Chickens would sit on as many eggs as possible to keep them warm to help them grow. You don't have to put eggs back after they are laid if you want to use them for cooking. If you would like them to hatch, let the chicken keep them safe, or perhaps put them in an incubator, but research that first.
well if the chicken is gone most of the day and then comes out and franticly eats and runs back to her hidding place It means she gone brudy and is ether laying on fertile eggs or thinks she laying on fertile eggs
There were a lot fertile soil in our back yard.
yes
Take the chicken to Shore 2 first. Then go back, bring fox to Shore 2. Take chicken back to Shore 1. Take chicken feed to Shore 2. Bring chicken to Shore 2. :)
Take the chicken over, come back. Take the chicken feed over, bring the chicken back. Take the fox over, come back. Take the chicken over.First, bring the chicken. All's well. Go back empty-handed. Next, bring the fox over. Then come back WITH the chicken! Now you should have the fox on one side and the chicken with the feed on the other. Bring the feed over, come back empty-handed, bring the chicken over, done.
First you take the chicken across to the other side ,then, you take the chicken feed across and put the chicken back in the basket and take it back over ,then, you put the chicken back where the fox is ,then, take the fox over to where the chicken feed is then go back and take the chicken over and then you are finished.
You bring the chicken across then u bring the fox across and bring the chicken back. Then u take the bag of food across then go get the chicken
Most people have no chicken in their back pocket. Storing chicken in your back pocket is very unhealthy and could make you sick.
First, take the chicken across. Then you go back and get the chicken feed. But before you go back across, pick up the chicken and bring it back. Then leave it there and get the fox. Go back and get the chicken.
You can stimulate egg laying by increasing the day length with lighting, and by keeping your coop at a higher temperature in winter. If you are getting 3 or more eggs per week per chicken, that is about all you can expect. In Northern Canada, my chickens pretty much quit laying in November and then start back to laying in late February. This is because of the shorter day light and colder temperatures. (They live in an insulated coop but they keep the coop at about freezing with their body heat.)
First, you take the chicken to the other side. Then, you then you take the feed. After that, before you go for the fox you get the chicken to the first side. Finally you take the fox and then the chicken and your done!
The "supine" position is a person laying on the back facing upwards