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To: Diana in Wisconsin; All

Well, I’m back with another “chicken” question. Two, actually. :-)

I’ve so far been unable to procure any Buckeye hatching eggs or chicks at a reasonable price, BUT, we have that broody hen, so...

Per the suggestion here, I was looking on eBay for Buckeye hatching eggs. Instead I found a local* seller of Black Copper Maran hatching eggs**, who agreed to sell me 6, and agreed to local pickup, which saved a lot of $$. When I got home I found the seller had actually given me a baker’s half dozen (7) eggs. Gotta do that A+++ feedback today!

I swapped in the Maran eggs, went off to put the already developing “mutt” eggs that had been under the hen into our cheapy little incubator, and our rooster who had earlier been merely a bit protective of the hen attacked the hen and eggs and broke two eggs B4 I could intercept! So he’s screened off, now. Aggghhh...!!!

Has anyone ever had this happen? Apparently the rooster somehow knew the Maran eggs were not his progeny. He was clearly not trying to mate - he was trying to force the poor hen (about half his size) off the remaining eggs.

The 2nd question is that the remaining eggs had broken eggs’ content on them, some of which had already dried. One at a time I washed that off under warm (not hot) water, thinking that otherwise the eggs would not “breathe” properly. Was that the right thing to?

* “Local” as in only about 20 minutes out of my way when traveling to go help out with my Mom. But in actuality a bit over an hour away from here.

** Really nice, big, dark (for chicken eggs) brown eggs. I am hoping that the game bird in these will help with predation of mice & young rats, once the Marans are grown. Plus the eggs look great & should be an attraction for selling if we do more of that. (We are down to 9 hens and 4 of those are “mutts”, only 3 are really good layers.)

*** The bad guy rooster is an Amberlink / Easter Egger mix - very colorful and handsome roo’ that looks almost like some sort of hawk - seems to help with scaring off actual hawks! But he’s normally gentle for a rooster. We had one previously who’s feathering / color looked almost like a bald eagle. :-)


107 posted on 04/07/2020 7:36:19 AM PDT by Paul R. (The Lib / Socialist goal: Total control of nothing left wort h controlling.)
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To: All

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108 posted on 04/07/2020 7:50:45 AM PDT by Liz (Our side has 8 trillion bullets; the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.)
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To: Paul R.; Ellendra

*PING*

Your help is needed, Ellendra!

(She might be working out at her property today, Paul.)


127 posted on 04/09/2020 7:40:49 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Paul R.

I’ve never heard of a rooster doing that, but if you need to swap out eggs in the future, I’d suggest doing it at night, or else blocking the rooster somewhere he can’t see you. They’ll be more likely to accept the new ones if he doesn’t actually see you doing it.

With my broody, I had to watch for her to get up from the nest on her own, then switch the eggs around fast before she came back and saw me. But I was just swapping real eggs for fake ones, since I can’t have any more chicks yet.

As long as you didn’t scrub the eggs, they should be good. Cleaning them at that stage is tricky, because you don’t want to wash the bloom off. But at the same time leaving the dried egg white would have caused problems too. I think you did the right thing there.


132 posted on 04/09/2020 3:14:59 PM PDT by Ellendra (A single lie on our side does more damage than a thousand lies on their side.)
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