The Cottage Smallholder


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How to breed any fowl using a broody hen: preparing a safe environment

Mrs Boss on the nest

Last weekend, Sara from Farming Friends generously offered us some Guinea Fowl eggs to put under our broody bantam hen, Mrs Boss. This would be an inter blog breeding event, a joint event hosted by Farming Friends and Cottage Smallholder.

We took up Sara’s offer. We would love Guinea Fowl in our garden. Why not give Mrs Boss a break? Having made up our minds we ventured into Sara’s Guinea Fowl gallery and were introduced to her regally named flock.

With the imminent arrival of guinea fowl eggs from the North, I left work early the next day to spring clean the family apartment aka The Ark. It has not been occupied since Thumper sat on a nest and hatched Carol. I gave the outside and inside a good scrub.

The Ark’s handkerchief garden was full of weeds. These were easily hoiked out whilst Inca growled and yapped from the other side of the wire.

Having removed the nettles (chickens hate these – perhaps they get stung like us?), Carol, our Maran hen, sauntered in and hoovered up the tasty weeds. She would not be chased away and stayed to supervise the preparation of the nest box, a woodchip base with a bouncy nest of fresh hay. There was a hole in the ark (I suspect rats) which I repaired with a tin can. Carol inspected the repair carefully and dissapeared for a dust bath.

I lifted Mrs Boss out of the main chicken house and introduced her to the vacant apartment. She was unimpressed until she spotted the large super king sized nest complete with decorative china egg. She leapt onto the bountiful nest with a cluck and settled immediately.

Meanwhile, in Yorkshire, Sara hunted for Guinea Fowl eggs. Her Guinea Fowl nests have been attacked by foraging Magpies so this was not an easy challenge. When she had finaly found six eggs, she packed them up and posted them.

I woke at six, instantly awake. The postman arrived four hours later. He was intrigued when I signed for the parcel. He couldn’t believe that it contained fresh eggs.

Parcel of guinea fowl eggs

I carefully unpacked the box. Sara had clearly taken enormous trouble to pack them. Excitement lightly dusted with apprehension. All the eggs were fine. I nipped down the garden in nightdress and wellies with the box of precious eggs, with Inca in tow.

I removed the china egg from under Mrs Boss and gently placed each egg underneath her warm fluffy wing. The diminutive chicken accepted each one with a small cluck and shimmy, to settle the eggs in place. By the time I was putting the sixth egg in place, she gave me a quick beady-eyed look as if to say,
“That’s enough now.”

All fowl eggs are in suspended animation until they are incubated, either in an electric incubator or under a broody hen. The incubation temperature is 37º to 38º c. Prior to incubation eggs can be moved and even sent hundreds of miles in the post.

If you are going to go down the hen rather than egg incubator route you must have a broody hen. Just putting a few eggs in a nesting box and hoping that a hen will see the light and sit on them will not work.

guinea fowl eggsOnce incubation begins the eggs cannot be left to get totally cold. The broody hen will occasionally move off the nest but will generally return within a few minutes.

A broody hen flattens on the nest and seems to enter a trance-like state. Food and water need to be available close to the nest, a sort of all day breakfast in bed. Generally I boot a broody hen off the nest twice a day so she can stretch her legs and not foul the nest. She will nip back to the nest pretty quickly.

Booting a hen of the nest is probably unnecessary but it gives you the chance to check it and the eggs. Both need to be clean. Checking is impossible if the nest of eggs is covered by a broody hen.

In just under a week Mrs Boss has moved from the lowest in the pecking order of our flock of chickens to an international cyber chick superstar. When I photographed her this evening, she looked happier than she has for months. Hopefully she will be the adopted mother of a clutch of keets, in 28 days time.

If Mrs Boss could speak I am sure she would say,”Thank you, Sara.” From the bottom of her chicken heart.


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24 Comments

  1. caroline helfferich

    hi
    i have buffy who is a buff orpington she has been sitting on eggs for 10 days today she removed herself from them, they were cold when i touched them, does that mean all the little chicks will be dead? 1st time at trying to hatch eggs so know nothing. she has gone back onto them, i put her back on, probably too late. hope u have great success with yours.

  2. Laura

    My mother-in-law brought me 13 guinea eggs for my son to hatch and I really have no idea what I’m doing. lol I’ve got a still air incubator and have it warmed up to 100 degrees and I have the eggs still sitting in a cardboard carton and marked the way the site said with the arrows and the X. The eggs have been sitting on a table for about an hour and the house is about 73 degrees. Should I wait till tomorrow to put the eggs in or just wait till tonight? I made sure the water troughs in the bottom of the incubator are full too. Am I doing this right?

    • Fiona Nevile

      Hi Laura

      I have no experience of using incubators so cannot advise.

      Why not try the chicken or guinea fowl forums?

  3. Fiona Nevile

    We have one pure white and four that I can’t identify. Perhaps you or Sara can help? I have a photo on my new post https://www.cottagesmallholder.com/?p=364

    Thanks for dropping by. We are having such fun with our flock.

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