windwalkingwolf wrote:How is it working? I've never tried to deliberately break a broody, so I'm curious. Did she go broody with NO eggs??!! Most of mine wait until there's a nest full :/ I might have to get some Silkies LOL I'm glad Memphis is feeling better :)
This has been my first real effort to break a broody too. Every other time I just let her snap out of it on her own. The only reason I though I should try this time is because of the really cold temperature days and nights at the the time she started.
Yes, she does sit on nothing when she's broody. She does try to steal any eggs that are being laid by the others, but I remove any that I find under her every day.
It hadn't occurred to me to include a Silkie when I was putting together my flock, but an opportunity presented itself, and I thought, why not? I wanted a mixed flock anyway. I'm really glad I wound up with her. She's a little bird with a big personality.
Status update:
I am happy to report that Gracie snapped out of her broody spell last Thursday. YAY!
I took note of all the good advice I've been given, and made some decisions on what to do and what not to do, based on the particular setup and circumstances at the time:
1. At the time she went broody, no one was laying: Memphis was well into a terrible moult, and Twyla got serious about her moult at around the time that Gracie got seriously broody.
2. At the same time we had the first big snow fall with nasty winds and then the temperatures plummeted to -24 at night. Since I had two "over-achiever" moulters and one broody, I thought it best to provide some auxiliary heat to the coop at night during the cold snap. Either that, or bring the three of them inside. Umm, no. I'd rather not if there's an alternative. because that arrangement comes with its own set of challenges: finding a location for three chickens in the house, getting them re-acclimated to the weather outside again afterwards, potential re-integration issues, especially if they're spending their days inside the coop during inclement weather, etc.
3. I did block off the nest boxes - no one was using them anyway at the time - so she wound up spending her days sitting in a corner of the coop.
4. I made a point of putting Gracie up on the roost with the other every night. This was sort of successful - I think it helped her to snap out of it sooner. BUT, because the home-built "light bulb in a clay pot" heater for the plastic waterer actually did double duty as a red night light , little miss jumped right back down to the floor of the coop as as soon as I left for the light. So the next day I made a design modification to the heater: I added a piece of round 2mm-thick aluminum to fit flush with the top of the clay pot so that when the waterer sits on it, so then very little light made it through, and the coop was dark after lights out. I put her up on the roost with the rest of the hens and left, thinking "problem solved". Not. I went in early the next morning before the lights came on and found her back in the corner on the floor again. I figured she had just done a blind free-fall and hoped for a soft landing. Lucky that's what happened. She could have broken something. After that, I decided that I would just let her be, since the night time temperatures at that point were on the way up again, and I was still providing some heat to bring the coop temperature up to between 5 and 10 degrees above outside ambient temperature (e.g., -23C outside equals -13C in the coop).
5. I decided that putting her in a wire bottom cage on the really cold days would serve no purpose other than create perfect conditions for frost bitten feet: humid body heat meets cold conductive wire. All day. I think that the cold ambient temperatures helped her to decide to quit without my having to resort to putting her an anti-broody cage.
Anyway, all is well again, and even the egg drought is over! Penelope and Annemieke each laid an egg on Saturday, and again yesterday. Two eggs every other day works for me.

Even if they hadn't gone back to laying until the warmer weather, that would be okay too, though, because I can only collect eggs when I get home at the end of the day, so when it's really cold and they are laid in the a.m., it's possible that they will be frozen and split by the time I get to them. I do have a piece of insulation in the bottom of each nest box, as well as lots of extra bedding, but sometimes it's just not enough.
RIP Scooby, AKA Awesome Dog. Too well loved to ever be forgotten. "Sometime in June", 2005 - January 24, 2017.
"Until one has loved an animal, part of one's soul remains unawakened" - Anatole France