Quote:
Originally Posted by
chickencoop789 
Just as Fred's Hens said you can keep them on the chick feed until lay. If you do that, I would switch them over to the non medicated feed. At 8 weeks there really is no use for the medication anymore. If you want to keep them with the chick feed, you will need to mix in oats starting at around 8 weeks. This lowers the protein level as the chicks' body gradually needs less protein. When the chicks are around laying age, gradually take out the oats and gradually switch them over to the layer feed.
You can also switch them over to the developer feed. This has a lower protein level so you dont need the oats. This you can feed until the point of lay.
Yes, cutting down on the protein from week 8-16 is not discussed here a whole lot, nor is the reason for doing so. These are purely my own thoughts and my own practices, so please take it with a grain of salt, do your own research (professional scholarly, Ag University type studies) and come to your own conclusions.
Years ago, when I got my first ISA Brown commercial birds, they entered POL at an astounding age of 16 weeks and laid huge eggs once they started, virtually skipping the whole pullet egg thing. They tended to burn out in year three. We decided to change how we were growing them out but not give up on the strain. We slowed down their maturity rate. We pushed back their POL until week 19 or 20. How? By reducing their high protein diet after week 8. There are a number of ways to accomplish this. Cut the 18% type Grower/Raiser feed with scratch, oats and other grains, or just feed a 14% complete feed. We have found that 14% feed, on average, mixed with lots of ranging, grass and garden roughage has done the job. We now find that this delayed POL has led to a longer lived layer. As always, YMMV.