Chickens

Nesting Box Wars!

A poultry conflict erupts when hens start fighting over the same egg-laying position.

- by Bruce Ingram

It can be a poultry world war when hens start fighting over the same nest spot.

The raucous cackles I heard coming from our chicken run could have meant any number of things. Two hens could have been fighting over some tidbit, some individual may have invaded another bird’s space or, the most likely outcome, nesting box wars were underway! Sure enough, when I arrived at the scene of the kerfuffle, I witnessed an unholy brawl taking place within the henhouse.

Three chickens were fighting over their divine right to sit in one nesting box. From their respective positions, Charlotte appeared to have arrived first, but Turquoise had climbed in and was pecking (none too delicately I might add) the former on the head. Meanwhile,

Carrie stood by, screaming curses at her two fellow heritage Rhode Island Reds.

Then, to my amazement, Carrie climbed into the box, head downward, tail up and soon, three chickens were a writhing ball of wrath. And inquiring minds may want to ask: How did Carrie intend to lay an egg after she had face planted herself in the nesting box?!

Now we humans may not understand the reasons behind such a brouhaha. After all, numerous other nesting boxes may exist in a coop, and fresh, sweet-smelling bedding may be scattered about throughout. But in the minds of many hens, only one box can exist for laying an egg, and fair play (meaning waiting your turn) doesn’t exist in the chicken world.

Peculiar Poultry Preference­s

So why do hens seem to usually desire (perhaps “demand” would be the more accurate verb) the same box to deposit an egg? Kristin and Justin Duke operate Mr. Animal Farm in Moneta, Virginia, and specialize in raising chickens and goats.

“From what I’ve read and understand, it’s an evolutiona­ry adaptation,” Kristin Duke says.

“One hen lays an egg there, and the next hen which comes along, sees the egg and thinks that must be a safe place to sit and lays her egg there. Before long, that particular nesting box becomes the place to lay an egg.”

My wife, Elaine, and I have two runs, and in one of them, the henhouse features three nesting boxes in a row against the back of the structure. The left box adjoins the left wall while the right box has an open space to its right. The box on the left is almost always the only one that contains eggs. Rarely does the middle box have an egg within it; and the right box, in the building’s 10 years of existence, has never held the honor of being chosen.

We believe that the left box became the original hot spot because of the security that the left wall and the building’s back provides.

A hen can sit there, face the building’s portal, and be instinctiv­ely aware that she only needs to watch in front of her — the only direction that danger could possibly come. Again, the feeling of safety that a certain nesting box presents seems to be paramount in a hen’s mind.

The Worst Possible War

Normal egg laying can obviously result in nesting box wars. However, things can go nuclear quickly when one or more of the hens become broody.

“Justin and I have two Ameraucana­s that are both 6 or 7 years old, and they no longer lay eggs of their own,” Duke says. “This year, they both went broody at about the same time, and

Three chickens were fighting over their divine right to sit in one nesting box. From their respective positions, Charlotte appeared to have arrived first, but Turquoise had climbed in and was pecking (none too delicately I might add) the former on the head. Meanwhile, Carrie stood by, screaming curses at her two fellow heritage Rhode Island Reds.

they both demanded the same box. There was no point in trying to separate them. They both would go steal eggs that our other chickens had laid and roll those eggs back to and up into the nest, squabbling all the time over the box.”

This story has a happy ending, however. After the eggs hatched, both Ameraucana­s calmly shared mama hen duties, neither one seeming to care which chicks were theirs. The instinct to care for and protect their offspring seemingly kicked in and that was all it often takes to make a broody hen — or hens — content.

Duke has seen as many as four of her Silkies, which are a smaller breed, in a nesting box at the same time, while I have never observed more than three of our Reds in a box simultaneo­usly. However, Elaine and I may hold some sort of record for most eggs under a broody Red at the same time — 20!

The situation took place several years ago when Wednesday, then a 6-month-old pullet, unexpected­ly became broody. Normally, from

our experience, our broody Rhode Island Reds will push out eggs from a box once they have 12 to 14 eggs under them. Perhaps these eggs are ones a hen has sensed have “gone bad” or that another hen may have laid in the nest. It may also be that a random egg just happens to be the odd one pushed out.

We were dismayed that Wednesday had so many eggs in the box, because it was quite clear from the many brown ovals protruding from all sides of her lower body that she was not successful­ly incubating six to eight of them. Finally, one day we witnessed the reason why so many eggs were present.

Another hen was sitting in the nest with Wednesday, and the latter was too inexperien­ced as a mother to force the other hen out or to use her beak to roll out the surplus eggs. The only solution was to discard eight or nine of the outer eggs and remove Wednesday and the remaining ones to a broody pen.

The Broody Pen Option

Duke and her husband prefer to let their hens resolve their issues regarding use of the nesting boxes in their coop. However, sometimes for the sake of goodwill and peace on earth — and when a brooder becomes so confrontat­ional with her fellow females that endless warfare is the norm — it’s just best to send the hen to a broody pen. Simply stated, Elaine and I no longer harbor any false hopes that our hens can settle their nesting box wars among themselves, specifical­ly if one of them has become broody.

For example: This past spring, 4-year-old Mary, our best-ever mother hen, went broody for the fifth time. She is very predictabl­e regarding her annual matronly mood, always seeming to decide between May 1st and 3rd to do what she does best — devotedly set on eggs for 21 days or so or until they hatch and then raise chicks. Every spring, we even set up her pen in late April in anticipati­on for what is to come.

That pen is in our basement and consists of two tarps, both doubled up and positioned on top of each other on the floor. A childproof fence is arranged in a 6-foot-by-3-foot rectangle on top of the two tarps, and the covering is an old screen door. A waterer and a feeder is

placed within, and we’re ready for chicks. This setup is inexpensiv­e and works well for us. The fencing is left over from when our two grandchild­ren were young, and the screen door is just an old one that wore out and we happened to keep.

Frankly, the reason we keep the pen in the basement is that we immensely enjoy witnessing the entire experience from day 20 onward. Mary softly clucking to the chicks as they try to chip their way out of an egg, the cheeps coming from beneath her, and the glorious morning when we see little puffballs peering out from under their mother. Then come the first ventures to the waterer and the feeder as Mary shows the chicks where their nourishmen­t is, meanwhile emitting the food cluck.

A final and very important reason to remove broody hens from their flock is the safety of the chicks. Once, we left Mary inside the henhouse, and the first chick that hatched was immediatel­y attacked and killed by the other hens.

We don’t ever want to experience that horrible spectacle again. But, again, the best way to end nesting box wars between a broody and every other hen in the flock is to move the sitting female to her very own pen.

Bedding Options for Nest Boxes

Several possibilit­ies exist for nesting box bedding. Elaine and I have tried sand and the traditiona­l straw. We found sand heavy and very difficult to remove from the box and henhouse floor. On the plus side, though, sand is extremely absorbent. Like us, Duke favors straw, but Paul Hinlicky, who operates St. Gaul Farm in Catawba, Virginia, along with his wife, prefers a third option.

“Pine shavings are far superior to straw,” he says. “Just throw several handfuls into a nesting box, and you have fragrant smelling, absorbent bedding. Plus, where we live, a bale of pine shavings cost $5, while straw costs between $7 and $8.

Hinlicky uses the deep-litter method for the henhouse floor and a modified version of it in the nesting boxes. “When the nest box shavings become soiled, we just add a couple handfuls more of them,” he says.

“So we don’t have to empty out the nest box bedding as often as we did when we used straw.”

Regardless of bedding preference­s, some people add lavender or mint to their nesting boxes and these herbs help suppress any foul odors. Other chicken fanciers position droppings boards under the roosts and remove the waste every morning, depositing it within a compost bin.

If you’ve become weary of the endless nesting box wars going on in your yard … well, gosh, it just occurred to me that there is no solution to ending these skirmishes! I guess we all will just have to become used to them. That is, of course, unless these battles involve a broody hen; then, you might want to consider a broody pen.

Bruce Ingram has been a freelance writer and photograph­er for more than 30 years. He has written more than 2,000 magazine articles and also five books on smallmouth river fishing. He and his wife write a blog (http://bruceingra­m outdoorsbl­og.blogspot.com) about the outdoors as well as their chickens.

A final and very important reason to remove broody hens from their flock is the safety of the chicks. Once, we left Mary inside the henhouse, and the first chick that hatched was immediatel­y attacked and killed by the other hens.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? When a group of hens see another hen happily laying eggs in a particular nest box, they may want that same box themselves!
When a group of hens see another hen happily laying eggs in a particular nest box, they may want that same box themselves!
 ??  ?? Three chickens in one nesting box: That’s Carrie’s tail that is straight up in the air. How is she going to lay an egg like that?!
Three chickens in one nesting box: That’s Carrie’s tail that is straight up in the air. How is she going to lay an egg like that?!
 ??  ?? Carrie tries to enter the nesting box while Turquoise viciously pecks Charlotte on the head.
Carrie tries to enter the nesting box while Turquoise viciously pecks Charlotte on the head.
 ??  ?? From left to right: Carrie, Turquoise and Charlotte all try to crowd into the same nesting box.
From left to right: Carrie, Turquoise and Charlotte all try to crowd into the same nesting box.
 ??  ?? Set up a broody pen to give a working hen the peace and quiet she needs to set and hatch a clutch of eggs.
Set up a broody pen to give a working hen the peace and quiet she needs to set and hatch a clutch of eggs.
 ??  ?? Can there actually be peace and harmony in the nesting area with one hen per nest?!
Can there actually be peace and harmony in the nesting area with one hen per nest?!
 ??  ?? The author’s Rhode Island Red hens, Turquoise and Carrie, line up to use the nesting box occupied by Charlotte. They won’t be patient for long.
The author’s Rhode Island Red hens, Turquoise and Carrie, line up to use the nesting box occupied by Charlotte. They won’t be patient for long.
 ??  ?? RIR hen Mary sits with her newly hatched chicks in her broody pen in the author’s basement.
RIR hen Mary sits with her newly hatched chicks in her broody pen in the author’s basement.
 ??  ??

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