ChatterBank2 mins ago
Please Help!!!! i need a chicken expert
3 Answers
I have 3 pullet bantams and 1 cockral, 1 of the pulletts has gone all broody again and is sat on eggs, Is it too late in the year to let her sit on the eggs that has been laid today, I tried to move her earlier and realised she was sat on 2 eggs, Is this the wrong time to let her sit on them or should i remove them, She seems hell bent on sitting on them but i am just a little concerned on the weather at the moment,but I do have a different coop that i can transfer her to, also if i let her sit on them at this time of year would i be able to rehome them free, when they are around 8 weeks old january/febuary time, or is it just a spring thing that people want 8 week old chicks.
any advice would be great,
Thanks
any advice would be great,
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by josaphine32. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Personally, I wouldn't let her sit at this time of year. A gamekeeper friend of mine says "blackberry birds" (i.e. those that hatch in the autumn) don't thrive well and the weather won't help either. I know this applies to game birds generally, but I would say the same applies to chickens. It's up to you, of course!
I guess folk will take chickens at any time of year, but why don't you keep them with their mum, if you do decide to let her sit, until they're a bit older, maybe approaching POL at 24-26 weeks, then at least they'll have had a good start in life and their new owners won't have to worry about raising young chicks. I don't let mine go till they're about 22-24 weeks.
I guess folk will take chickens at any time of year, but why don't you keep them with their mum, if you do decide to let her sit, until they're a bit older, maybe approaching POL at 24-26 weeks, then at least they'll have had a good start in life and their new owners won't have to worry about raising young chicks. I don't let mine go till they're about 22-24 weeks.
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