A Support Thread For Those Of Us Living In An Egg-Free Zone

I have 1/2 doz eggs on the shopping list today so the girls can have scrambled eggs for breakfast tomorrow
th.gif


Not that I really think this about my girls and I'm sure you don't either but it's a funny pic someone sent me.
big_smile.png
 
400
I have a Buff Orphington who has only laid one egg since we got them over a month ago and that was the day after we got them home. I hope my picture doesn't upset anyone!
 
What a great idea for a thread, I understand your pain; in autumn my exbattery quit laying at three years old, my white leghorn was molting and I had gotten two new point of lay pullets who proceeded to not lay until they were nearly a year old.....

There were no eggs for about two-three months, fortunately now I get two a day. :)
 
Last edited:
I have 6 backyard hens here in New Jersey. My hens stopped laying completely last October apparently when the days got shorter. For months I fed, cleaned and worried. I couldn't find a single thing wrong. The girls were getting a good diet, extra greens and daily treat (but not too much treat.) Because I believe in letting the hens have their natural cycle I do not put a light in my coop.

On New Year's Day we got our first egg as the girls started laying again. In January we were presented with 0 to 3 eggs per week. Slowly the number of eggs increased until this April when production went into high gear.

My youngest hen is 1 year old, 1 is 2 years old and the other 4 are 3 years old.

I admit to changing feeds in early April. My hens seem to be thriving on the new feed. I'm getting 5 - 6 eggs per day which is more than the hens were laying as Spring chickens!!

My coop is written up on https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/southern-new-jersey-cluckingham-palace
 
Last edited:
Thank you both
smile.png


I have been telling myself for 46 days “it is OK, you will not be alone” and logged on this morning thinking that if I have had no replies, maybe I am alone .. how depressing
wink.png


We actually do not eat a lot of eggs and what they do lay usually get scrambled and fed back to them and also shared with the neighbours.

Luckily I am not in this for the eggs, I just love my gals and having them around. Having said that, I do like the little thank you’s they occasionally leave in the nest box.

My friends and neighbours are still giving me empty egg boxes. I have over 30 egg boxes in the garden shed ..

In 2 months we got 16 eggs, at that rate it would take 45 months or 3.75 years to fill them!

At the current rate of 0 eggs .. the plan is to get a bigger garden shed to store the boxes
lau.gif


SNJchickens your coop and hens are beautiful!

Will today be the day the drought breaks
hu.gif
 
Keep the faith! For me all six hens stopped laying for 3 months. That is NINETY days during which time I had to buy "grocery store" eggs!! After much worry, quite a lot of research and constant TLC it seems that the natural cycle for my hens in New Jersey is to rest for the early part of the winter (from molt to New Year's Day.) During this period of eggless days I went over every aspect of care, bought feather grower feed and wrote a journal full of observations, concerns and theories. I went so far as to worry about the timing of the change to the new coop! All to no avail. When the girls were ready they began to lay again, probably laughing at my stress.

We do eat the eggs but currently there are plenty to share with the neighbors. In fact, I could use those extra egg boxes. Particularly popular in March (Dr. Seuss' birthday) is my hen named Maya who lays green eggs. I try to have enough green eggs for the children in the neighborhood to have green eggs and ham. Generally, I feed back shells and a few hard cooked, crushed eggs mixed with mealworms.

Laughing at your timeline to fill the current stash of egg boxes. My DH once calculated the cost of each egg as he gently teased me about "that first $500 egg."

My joy is in the chickens not the eggs. The girls' personalities are wonderful. If I am upset Emma Jean, a Rhode Island Red, will come and sit on my lap. Pumpkin, a Cochin, goes broody and is lovely to watch if I purchase chicks for her to raise (yes, with no rooster I have to buy chicks for her.) The girls free range when I am out in the yard to keep them safe from the hawks. They come to see what I am doing periodically during their play time. Elsbeth, a Spangled Hamburg, has to make certain that whatever it is that I am doing is done RIGHT. She has a habit of sitting on the roost softly clucking (approval? missed a spot? good job?) when I'm cleaning the coop. Spice, a hen of uncertain lineage, is the guard hen. Maya, an Araucana, always thinks the sky is falling which is understandable because she was grabbed (and dropped) by a hawk when she was a pullet. Priscilla, Elsbeth's twin, likes to pretend she is aloof until I dig up a grub or worm in the garden.

I hope you will let us know when that egg arrives to break the drought. Meantime, just enjoy your sweet hens.
 
Thank you SNJchickens

Don’t those grocery store eggs pale in comparison to the home grown ones!

I am used to scrambled eggs being yellow; not white. I buy them the most expensive free range eggs and they still have nowhere near the beautiful coloured yolks I get from my gals.

I know that it is timing with my gals, what with broodiness, moulting and our just coming into the season of less daylight hours.

Lols at your $500 egg.

Yep, definitely in this for the joy .. no matter how bad my day has been, my gals are guaranteed to put a smile on my face when I walk out the back door.

Cilla, my bantam Cochin, currently has two 8 weeks old chicks … I bought her some fertile eggs (no roosters allowed here) and yep, watching her with her bubs is beautiful.

Dusty, bantam Langshan is the whinger of the flock .. even at 6am her day has not started well and ask her in the afternoon how she is going and she has no qualms in telling you that it did not improve. Apparently meal worms do help
wink.png


Blondie is the Diva of the flock and LuLu, the Frizzle, is the clown.

For sure I will let everyone know when the drought is broken and intend to keep a record of how much longer it continues.

I have a feeling my post tomorrow morning will be .. “47 days!”
wink.png
 
Sounds like you have a well rounded flock.

I believe you a perfectly correct that your hens need their natural vacation from laying. Many people here put lights in their coops to keep egg production going but I don't think this is good for the hens in the long run. When I visit and mentally compare my hens to theirs I can see a significant difference in attitude. That sounds ridiculous, I know, but my girls are perky, buff and fit which is evident in their strut, their eyes and in their general demeanor. There is nothing wrong with the other hens. They are well fed and cared for, but they are missing that intangible "something" that hens allowed to rest display unawares.

Grocery store eggs, even the free range or Omega 3 eggs, have little or no flavor. I've had neighbors tell me they don't like my hens' eggs because they "taste too strong." (Another neighbor won't eat my eggs because they "come out of a chicken's butt", however we won't go into that here.)

When my Pumpkin is raising chicks she doesn't lay until well after she starts sending the babies out on their own to forage. At that point the babies are 3 month old or a bit older. When I first let her raise chicks I learned an entire chicken language. It was fascinating. After a few weeks I could tell what was going on and what she was telling the chicks. Non-chicken people think I'm crazy.

What will you do if one or both of your chicks are roosters? I bought my chicks from a local farmer who agreed to take back any roosters. This was a good deal for her because she'd get back a 5 month old chicken in excellent health. It was a good deal for me because I needn't worry about finding a home for a rooster.

When it comes to laying, Pumpkin, Emma Jean and Spice have to announce to the world that they have just done a wonderful thing. Spice goes one better and announces loudly that "I'm going to lay an egg" and "I'm going to lay an egg NOW!" before she repairs to the nest box. Once the deed is done each of the three will continue announcing until I go out to collect the egg and thank the HIQ (hen in question) for such a wonder. Non-chicken people think I'm crazy. (See the pattern here?)

What did the nest box hold this morning?
 
47 Days
wink.png


Tee hee SNJchickens we are not crazy; people who do not own chickens are crazy
tongue2.gif


Lols at your neighbour
lau.gif


At 8 weeks, I am fairly confident that KiKi and Crystal are girls. They both have small, pale combs and no wattles. Cilla hatched five and the 3 obvious boys were found homes at 6 weeks.

KiKi:



Crystal:
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom