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Broody Bantam Hen

The Worlds Most Protective Mother

If you have backyard Bantam chickens, sooner or later, probably sooner, one or more of them will go broody. A broody Bantam hen is hard to miss.

If your hen stays on the nest after laying her egg longer and longer, and then stays on the nest overnight, even if the eggs have been gathered, you have a broody hen. They also cluck a lot, ruffling up their feathers.

In some cases, they’ll pull out their own feathers on their breast and back, leaving them looking decidedly moth eaten. The mothering instinct is strong in Bantams.

In many egg producing breeds, this maternal broody trait has been bred out, as in most cases, we want eggs, not a bird that lays eight or ten eggs and then wants to become a mother.

I cherish my bantam hens for this broody characteristic.

broody Bantam hen in her box

Bantam hens will hatch out any kind of egg, even attempting to hatch out golf balls if you want to hold them in the broody state until you get enough eggs to put under her to hatch.

Most bantams are pretty small, so a large clutch will be up to eight eggs of her own, or three duck or larger breed chicken eggs.

Yes, I said duck eggs. Nothing is more hilarious when, ducks being ducks, they head straight for a pond, leaving the mother hen clucking anxiously on shore as they frolic and swim.

They can also be used to hatch out quail or pheasant eggs successfully. In this case, a good clutch could be up to ten eggs as they're smaller than Bantam eggs.

Broody Bantam hens have such a strong instinct to be a mother that they’ll not only hatch anything, they will adopt other chicks to raise along with their own.

This depends entirely on the hen, and the age of the chicks. The most successful adoptions will be of chicks that are the same age or within a day of her own chicks.

To graft chicks onto a broody hen place the extra clutch under her at night, and very quietly. By morning, the chicks will be accepted as her own, as she can’t count, and has no sense of smell to differentiate them. Don’t attempt to graft older chicks, as they won’t bond to her, and she could kill them.

The maximum they can adopt will depend on the size of the hen, and if you plan to help brood with a heat lamp. Broody Bantam hens can adopt several more chicks than she can hatch, up to a total of twenty chicks.

Having a sub flock of Bantam hens in the hen house to go broody and take over the task of incubating and raising your replacement pullets for egg production ensures that you have easy going hens, as the presence of a mama hen gives the chicks a feeling of safety and security.

Tell me your Backyard Chickens story...

What are your best tips on how to make rustic chicken house furniture for your birds? A hint to other chicken gardeners out there on how to make chicken raising easier? Share it!

A Short Snappy Title goes here...

See other great Backyard Chicken Stories here;

Each link goes to another page about our favorite birds...

My Bantam  my Bantam's name is Goldeen and lives with older chickens than her, so they peck her. She is old enough to lay eggs, has, and stopped laying. She has ...

Ex Prize fighter finds peace in chicken farming  Hi I am the undisputed chicken.

I had about 150 to 200 laying hens that were free rangeing all over my property. I was getting about 7 to 8 dozen eggs ...

Sleep overs....  I have several hens, one Henny Penny who is ex-battery, a Sussex Star, a Blue Belle, two Columbines and four Pekin Bantams. There are three houses, one ...


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Sustainable Gardening

Backyard Chickens


Broody Hen with her chicks

Learn more about
Backyard Chickens:

The Eggporeum

The Broody Bantam Hen

Breaking up a Broody Hen

Collecting Eggs for Hatching

Candling Eggs

Dowsing Eggs

Hatching Bantam Eggs

Raising Chicks

Grafting Chicks onto a Broody Hen

Egg Hatching Troubleshooting Guide

Feeding Chickens

Chicken Herbarium

Bantam Roosters

Chickens Site Map

Wanting more information about raising Backyard Chickens? This E-Book is packed with tips, hints and techniques for the best success with your home poultry flock - with four bonus pages not found anywhere else!

Backyard Chickens E-Book


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