Broody or incubator?
| Sun, Jan 31 2010 05:14pm GMT 1 |

Poultry Talk. com Team
316 Posts
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So which are your views on which is best, the natural
mother broody or to use an incubator?
Tell us here and discuss!
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| Sun, Jan 31 2010 08:30pm GMT 2 |

commander dildoo
3 Posts
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for large game you cant beat broodys i dont think,they dont seem to
thrive the same without one
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| Tue, Feb 2 2010 09:56am GMT 3 |

happylittlehenny
96 Posts
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In my experience of having broodies they do a better job
than the incubator hands down, its nature nothing man made can
possibly better it. No fuss about humidity, sticky shells,
splayed legs etc and the chicks seem to bounce out of the shells
and are as strong as oxes whereas chicks from the incubator tend to
take a little longer to steady and strengthen. In the end they do
catch up with no ntoicable differences though.
But then there are the con's of the broodie, some
don't sit tight and leave half way through, some eat the eggs or
even kill chicks but this is quite rare. Also you are limited to
how many eggs you set to only a few depending on egg size and the
size of the broodie, and once those chicks have hatched you can't
just load the broodie back up again as she will need rest.
The pro's of the incubator are that it unless
there is a power cut or electrical fault doe's not stop or give up.
You can easily check the progress of eggs development without being
attacked by a nasty hen! Also, large inubators can hold many many
times more eggs than a hen could sit on. Plus when the chicks hatch
you just clean it out and put some more in! Or if youre organised
you can load on a weekly basis and hatch your chicks weekly, which
is not possible with a broodie.
But personally I do prefer nature, but in reality I hardly ever use
it and opt for incubators as they suit our situation better.
Julia
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| Sat, Apr 10 2010 12:48pm BST 4 |

Ducklady
19 Posts
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I pretty much agree with the above post. I find it much more
relaxing to to a broody hatch but have done lots more incy hatches.
I started hatching in January and would be concerned about keeping
a broody warm enough at this time of year.
If you only want to hatch a few birds per year broody is the way to
go. Incy hatched chicks are slower to feather up which means a lot
of special housing if hatching from January. My broody hatched
chicks were in with the main flock (with mum still looking after
them) at 8 weeks old last summer.
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| Sat, Apr 10 2010 05:30pm BST 5 |

Meg L
46 Posts
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I try to let the girls do the job, but sometimes you just have to
use an incubator and then I'm worse than a broody hen and it's much
more work raising them than if you let the mums do it.
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| Fri, Apr 16 2010 08:51pm BST 6 |

dan's chicks and chooks
11 Posts
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i totally agree i have around 20 hybrids but it allways seems to be
the smallest who goes broody limiting the number of eggs i can put
under her. there is at least no hassle with broodies they just sit
tight and do theyre thing! as long as they have water and food
close at hand then you can expect a decent hatch! i usually get
about 80 % hatch rate! not bad for a newbie!
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