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TINY EGG!!!

post #1 of 24
Thread Starter 

So I've only had one hen who was laying, but today there were 2 eggs in the boxes, I'm assuming the one that always lays, and the other decided to finally start laying. The problem however was that the egg was tiny! I wanted to know 1) Is it normal for a hen's first egg to be small? and 2) Will they always be this size???

 

 

 

I've added a pic where far right is a Large egg, Middle egg is a medium (the norm from my hen) and the far left is this egg I found today.

 

 

 

Proud owner of 3 Dogs, 4 Black Silkies, and 10 Buff Orpington/Rhode Island Reds, 1 Black Sexlink, 1 Black Australorp, 1 Golden Comet, 1 Light Brahma, and 1 Barred Rock. Yet the most expensive habit I have is my wife of 1 year.

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Proud owner of 3 Dogs, 4 Black Silkies, and 10 Buff Orpington/Rhode Island Reds, 1 Black Sexlink, 1 Black Australorp, 1 Golden Comet, 1 Light Brahma, and 1 Barred Rock. Yet the most expensive habit I have is my wife of 1 year.

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post #2 of 24

Have your chickens ran out of water lately? 

 

It's the shape that makes the breed, and the color that makes the variety.

 

  -- -- Spa Days for Chickens -- --

 

 

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It's the shape that makes the breed, and the color that makes the variety.

 

  -- -- Spa Days for Chickens -- --

 

 

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post #3 of 24
It's normal for first eggs and a few after that to be a little weird. old.gif Even a long-time layer can sometimes lay a small egg, which is called a fart egg. It's pretty normal. Wait and see if your new layer starts picking up a bit over the next few days.
Aside from that, congratulations on the egg!


(Wow, I can't believe this is my 9000th post. I spend too much time on here. Go BYC. lol.png)
"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )
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"I'm looking at nuclear power, not weapons - there's an 87% difference." ; )
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post #4 of 24
Thread Starter 

JerseGianFolk, they have not ran out of water lately.

Proud owner of 3 Dogs, 4 Black Silkies, and 10 Buff Orpington/Rhode Island Reds, 1 Black Sexlink, 1 Black Australorp, 1 Golden Comet, 1 Light Brahma, and 1 Barred Rock. Yet the most expensive habit I have is my wife of 1 year.

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Proud owner of 3 Dogs, 4 Black Silkies, and 10 Buff Orpington/Rhode Island Reds, 1 Black Sexlink, 1 Black Australorp, 1 Golden Comet, 1 Light Brahma, and 1 Barred Rock. Yet the most expensive habit I have is my wife of 1 year.

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post #5 of 24



I can't see your picture - but I can tell you that it's normal for a new pullet to lay a much smaller egg when they first start out.  Then the eggs will get larger as time goes by.  My White Leghorn started laying on Thanksgiving Day 2011 and her eggs increased to be normal size by Christmas.  My Lavender Orpingtons started laying at the beginning of March 2012 and their eggs are still increasing in size. 

 

WL's 1st egg:

our 1st egg 005.JPG

Here's my 1st LO egg in the container with my WL's eggs.

Lav Orp 1st egg 3 2 12 013.jpg

 

 

Quote:
Originally Posted by nwe319 View Post

So I've only had one hen who was laying, but today there were 2 eggs in the boxes, I'm assuming the one that always lays, and the other decided to finally start laying. The problem however was that the egg was tiny! I wanted to know 1) Is it normal for a hen's first egg to be small? and 2) Will they always be this size???

 

 

 

I've added a pic where far right is a Large egg, Middle egg is a medium (the norm from my hen) and the far left is this egg I found today.

 

 

 



 


Edited by bobbieschicks - 4/3/12 at 5:54am

My chickens: WL, AC, EE, LO, Marans, EE/WL mix & Silkies = a rainbow of egg colors :) 

 

Chicken farmer since July 2011

 

"He remembered that they were but flesh, a passing breeze that does not return."  Psalm 78:39

 

My BYC page http://www.backyardchickens.com/a/bobbieschickss-member-page

 

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My chickens: WL, AC, EE, LO, Marans, EE/WL mix & Silkies = a rainbow of egg colors :) 

 

Chicken farmer since July 2011

 

"He remembered that they were but flesh, a passing breeze that does not return."  Psalm 78:39

 

My BYC page http://www.backyardchickens.com/a/bobbieschickss-member-page

 

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post #6 of 24

The first few eggs can be weird.  Usually inside the little egg, it's all white, with no, or very little yolk.  Sometimes it's ALL yolk.  Once in a while, they forget (lol here) to put a shell on an egg, and you end up with a leather covered egg.  Not to worry, your young layer will have bigger and bigger eggs, until they are normal size.  Think of it like a test egg.

 

 

post #7 of 24

Yes, the hens/pullets are just starting up, so the eggs can be pretty funky when they start laying, said above.

I asked if they ran out of water because laying hens need a constant water source or it could throw them off, making some eggs small and no eggs at all. 

 

It's the shape that makes the breed, and the color that makes the variety.

 

  -- -- Spa Days for Chickens -- --

 

 

Reply

 

It's the shape that makes the breed, and the color that makes the variety.

 

  -- -- Spa Days for Chickens -- --

 

 

Reply
post #8 of 24

Is she a bantam??

Jesus is the ONE AND ONLY WAY! that whosever believes in Him, shall not perish, but have everlasting life in Him! With Jesus, In heaven, walking in the streets of gold! 

for we walk by faith not by sight. 

The farm blog: http://crownranchmo.com/WordPress/

 

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Jesus is the ONE AND ONLY WAY! that whosever believes in Him, shall not perish, but have everlasting life in Him! With Jesus, In heaven, walking in the streets of gold! 

for we walk by faith not by sight. 

The farm blog: http://crownranchmo.com/WordPress/

 

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post #9 of 24

Hens do lay some odd eggs, but it should be an infrequent occurrence, and usually when the pullets begin to lay. You'll find tiny "fart" or "wind" eggs that don't have yolks. You'll find huge eggs that are double-yolkers. You'll find eggs with funny shells. If you consistently have odd eggs from all of your hens, that you have issues - either stress or disease, or as someone else mentioned, an inconsistent supply of water.

Terry Golson

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Terry Golson

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post #10 of 24
We even got a 3 yolk from a new layer.

1 hubby(went to be with Jesus 05-12-12), three kids, 1 grand daughter

 

2 boxers, 2 cats, and bunches of chickens

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1 hubby(went to be with Jesus 05-12-12), three kids, 1 grand daughter

 

2 boxers, 2 cats, and bunches of chickens

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