What does roody mean?
A. Going “broody” just refers to the instinct a hen has to stop laying eggs every day and to start sitting on the ones she’s already laid, so that in 21 days they will hatch into chicks (provided a rooster has been mating with the hen). Some chickens “go broody” all the time. They are often bantam breeds, such as Silkies, or mixed breeds. Most purebreds, like Rhode Island Reds, were themselves not hatched by a mother hen. They were hatched in an egg incubator in a hatchery somewhere. You see, if you want a chicken that lays a lot of eggs for eating, you don’t want one that still has the instinct to stop laying eggs and sit on her eggs all the time. You want one that has had all the broody instincts bred out of her so she’ll lay for you year-round. So farmers over the years have raised up what are known as utility breeds; chickens that don’t go broody and that lay almost all year ’round.