The first broody hen we had setting on eggs hatched out 4 chicks. We do have another broody hen that is setting on 7 eggs. Just yesterday, we saw that she hatched out 4 chicks. Evidently 5 hatched out originally but 1 died and two eggs must have been not fertilized as nothing hatched. We'll wait until those chicks are a few days old before moving them.
Since the meat birds are in the freezer, our chicken tractor has vacancy. It's a perfect place to move the first momma hen and her four chicks. It is interesting to watch her instinctively teach her little biddies to scratch to look for bugs, worms and seeds. They are all very active. We did have to put some guards so that the chicks couldn't get out. Two had gotten out by squeezing under the bottom the other day. Had Ginger, our cat, seen them, well, it would have been disastrous for the two chicks. For Ginger, it would have been a great day for a two piece chicken dinner.
The momma hen is a good mother. If I walk in the tractor, she perks up, fluffs out her feathers and makes ominous, threatening noises. Her little chicks huddle nearby and she provides protection like any good momma would.
I watched her as she methodically scratched at the grass. Then she pecked and pointed with her beak. She had unearthed a beetle and the little chick that was paying attention scored a nice meal. The is teaching them life lessons that they'll need to survive. These chicks likely aren't even hers. She was broody and we just grabbed a few eggs and put them under her. She sat on them for 21 days, hatched them out and now cares for them as if they were her own.
Yesterday, we had driving wind and rain that came through in the late afternoon. I went out and held the chicken tractor down. Once the winds subsided, I went back inside. A little later I thought of the chicks. Oh no! If they get wet, they'll get hypothermia and die! I went out to check on them and all were just fine. The momma hen covered them with her wings. She was soaking wet, but her little chicks were warm and dry beneath her, safe from the storm.
It would be nice if the little chicks were all pullets, but normally about 50% are pullets and 50% are cockerels. We will probably get 2 little hens out of this batch to replace those that were eaten by minks. For the roosters, well, they'll end up in a pot for supper in about 6 months.
In a few days we'll move the other broody hen with her four little chicks into the chicken tractor. We'll raise the little ones in the tractor until around 20-24 weeks old. That's when they'll lay their first eggs and we will move them out to the barnyard in the general population. By then the momma hens will have taught them everything they need to know.
No comments:
Post a Comment