"Hentirement"

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When acquiring a flock of backyard chickens most people are excited about the farm-fresh eggs they will be collecting from their own girls. Not much thought is given to what to do after they no longer lay regularly. Laying hens being associated only with egg laying has been drilled into our consciousness by the factory farm egg producers.

The hens for production spend their entire lives in small cages and then are slaughtered between 18 months and 2 years of age because they are deemed unproductive at that point. It has become common knowledge that after the age of 2 hens no longer lay eggs and are worthless. I am here to challenge this presumption.

In this article, I intend to prove that hens are worth much even beyond their laying years. A hen does not lose her wroth just because she no longer lays eggs regularly, I say “regularly” for a reason; I will expand upon this. But first, let’s discuss the truth about laying hens.

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It is of popular opinion that hens will only lay for 2 years. After this point, they no longer lay eggs and are nothing more than chicken stock in terms of value. This is not true. The truth is that once a hen starts to lay eggs, she will lay dependably for the first two years. After that point, she still lays but maybe not to the tune of one egg a day as she did in her earlier years. A hen will lay eggs for as long as she lives.

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Let's do some simple math here. Every hen is born with at least 1000 yolk cells possibly even more. For our purposes let's just use 1000 yolk cells as our working number. These are all the potential eggs that she will lay during her entire life. For the first two years of her life, she will lay at the most “regular” intervals of her laying years.

A productive laying breed such as the Australorp, Orpington, or Rhode Island Red will lay about 3-5 eggs a week. That is about 156 to 260 eggs a year. The Australorp holds the record for the most eggs laid in a year at an astounding 364 eggs. This is the extreme end of the spectrum, for our purposes we will work with a more modest number.

Given our 1000 eggs a year postulate, for the first 2 years of her life, she will have laid approximately anywhere from 315 to 520 eggs. Assuming that she is born with at least 1000 yolk cells as our working number (as most laying breeds are), this means she has only laid a little under half of her total egg potential.

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Now, just because she is over the age of 2 does not mean that she will not lay any more eggs. She will, she may lay 2-4 eggs a week instead of her initial interval of 3-5 eggs a week. She keeps laying eggs but slows down a bit. As she ages, she will slow down even more. If she makes it to 5 years of age you might expect to get 1-3 eggs a week. As she progresses even further in age you can probably count on 1-2 eggs a week.

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I currently have 5 Buff Orpington ladies who are 10 years old. The life expectancy of average backyard chickens is anywhere between 5-7 years. If well cared for they can reach 10+ years. For a backyard hen to make it past the age of 7 defies most odds. To reach the mile mark of 10 years and beyond is rare. This past May, my 5 “Golden Girls” officially reached this 10-year milestone.

Even at this age my 5 Buff Orpington girls still lay. During the summer when bugs and other delectables are at the most abundant, I can count on about 2-3 eggs a day from my 5 senior ladies. Some will lay that day, others will not. But as a general rule, during the time of the year when the days are long, warm and bugs are plenty, they will lay well. When fall arrives, the days shorten and the weather cools off.

During this cooler part of the year, they typically slow down to maybe 1 egg a day from the 5. During the coldest part of winter, they will cease laying altogether, their bodies are using egg laying resources to keep warm in the bitter weather. This is just not observed by older hens but by all hens. However, in the spring as the days warm again and the sun returns to our sky, they will pick back up the pace to 2-3 eggs a day.

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You see, even at their advanced age, they still lay eggs. The assumption that a hen will only lay for the first 2 years of her life is unfounded. She will lay eggs till the day she dies.

So really the question is not that they stop laying eggs but what to do after laying hens past their peak laying performance. In the factory farm setting, after 2 years of age, the hens are sent to slaughter and a new batch is brought in. Although these girls still have plenty of laying years ahead of them, they are nonetheless considered expired and slaughtered. These ladies have barely begun their lives then it is abruptly halted.

For the backyard chicken keeper, this is not the normal proceedings. We tend to hang on to our ladies well beyond two years of age.

The question then becomes, what to do with our hens that are so advanced in age that they no longer lay eggs? My 5 “Golden Girls” are not far from this point. I expect next year I will have collected the last egg from my Buff Orpington ladies. At this point, I will consider them officially in “Hentirement”. Hentirement is the time in a hen's life when she has officially stopped laying but still has much to offer beyond eggs.

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Here on The Kuntry Klucker Farm all my ladies and gents will live out their natural lives under the loving care of their keepers. Just because a hen stops laying eggs does not mean that she is worthless. Hens can contribute in many ways beyond the humble egg.

So, what can a hen who has reached “hentirement” offer you may ask? She can produce in many ways. For example, I have found that my older hens make excellent mothers. Since they no longer have to use their energy for laying eggs they focus their efforts elsewhere. I have found that when I bring a new batch of chicks to the backyard, my older ladies are the first to show them the ropes.

Taking them to all the hot spots around the yard such as the dust bathing holes, water coolers, good sunbathing locations, the feed buffet, introducing them to the best roosters, and more. My older ladies have even adopted a few chicks and raised them for me.

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Older hens although no longer laying still offer all the benefits of having chickens such as providing compost for the gardens, eating the bugs on garden plants, tilling the soil, and ridding the yard of all available weeds.

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Additionally, I find that my older girls make the best lap chickens. No longer distracted by the needs of egg laying they become better companions. Instead of focusing on the necessities that go with egg laying they have more time to spend and bond with their keeper. Thus, my older ladies are the lap chickens of the flock. Not only is it adorable to be claimed by the hen, the younger generations see this and model their behavior. Thus my subsequent broods are friendlier and more personable towards their keepers.

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Finally, an older hen who has seen and lived through it all is the zen master of the flock. No longer spring chickens learning the ropes of life, they are the pros of what it means to be a chicken. My older girls are the calmest members of the flock, nothing surprises them. They know the dangers of life and help others avoid them, they know and roll with the changing seasons and weather patterns. They are the wisdom barring members of the flock.

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Above all, they deserve all the honor and respect that is due to them. They nourished me with their life during their laying years, it is my turn to nourish them during their twilight years. My older girls are the gems of my flock. They shine bright as they have been polished by the trials of life.

For a backyard chicken to make it to the ripe old age of 10 is a feat that defies all the odds. I don’t know how much time they have left but I do know this, they will live the rest of their life grazing on bugs and bathing in the sun glistening like the gems they are.

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I hope you have enjoyed this article and possibly even helped you decide what to do after your ladies no longer lay eggs. It’s a personal decision for each and every backyard chicken keeper. For me, allowing my ladies to live out their post-laying years in “hentirement” is the decision I have made for my ladies.

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About author
Kuntry Klucker
Hi, allow me to introduce myself, my name is Noelle Moser (a.k.a. Kuntry Klucker), I have activly kept chickens for 10+ years. I currently have and maintain 7 coops and about 50 or so ladies and gents well, according to chicken math anyway. I have several breeds including Orphington, Australorps, Silkies, Polishes, Cochins, and Easter Eggers. I love the farm/country life and my "Backyard Divas".

I am a published author. I have published a book, my work and pictures have also been featured in several periodicals. In addition to my activity here on BYC, I actively maintain a blog dedicated to the joy's of keeping backyard chickens

Welcome to the Coop! Pleased to meet you and thanks for reading!

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I appreciate your perspective. Culling after two years has always seemed a little "handmaiden's tale" to me 😄. I also prefer to let them live out their own lives.
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Very good article written from personal experience which is the best source. I am in the same place with my older ladies and feel the same way, they will have a nice retirement.
Love this post, my ladies are older and I really thought I would never get another egg. Now I can't wait. They are in moult right now so now I know I have some eggs to look forward to.

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I have 3 hens that are about 8 1/2 years old. 2 are starting to molt now. I have received a few dozen eggs this summer. Their butts are messy now, but they dirt bath often. They sure have personalities, and we talk every day. We commiserate about the weather, and I complain when they poop on the porch and steps. They still get excited about fruit and other scraps. I'm 73, and I think they're doing pretty darn well.
 
Beautifully written article and I agree with every word. Bantams lay fewer eggs but for a very long time. Some years ago my matriarch pekin bantams, Sybil and Betty, incredibly lived to 12 years. Betty had a stroke and walked in circles for her last year but still appeared to enjoy food and companionship. At around the age of 10, Sybil defended the others when a small dog somehow made it into our secure backyard. She was wounded but survived and became a house hen because I nursed her in the study. She would lead the others on a tour if the door was open.

And yes, as a 70 year old retired male healthcare professional, I have also found other ways to contribute through volunteering at Hospice and on the Boards of Mental Health and HIV charities.
 
My Ruby was 11 when she was killed by a racoon a couple weeks ago. Maybe 1 egg twice a week. But we didn't get her for eggs to begin with. We got her because of her personality and funny traits.
Does the whole ideal of "Back Yard" chickens really have all that much to do with egg laying anyway? I am down to 10 good layers and cannot give eggs away fast enough. But have only one hen i would like to retire/rehome. And she is my wife's favorite since Ruby died.
My back yard flock was for entertainment and pets, with a side of eggs to begin with. And the occasional cockeral for dumplings.
 
I loved the article and wholeheartedly agree with your retirment plans. My old girls also take over hatching and raising chicks. They are the first to claim nests and doggedly brood and hatch them. Nothing gives me more enjoyment than watching my old girls with a brood of chicks following them around learing the ways of flock life. No matter what I have decided they have earned their retirment scratch!
 
I've had 4 flocks of hens since we moved to the "country" almost 40 years ago. The oldest hen I've ever had, Aphro, lived to be 13 y/o. She was killed by a hawk probably because she was so old and unable to run as fast anymore. She laid intermittently until the ripe old age of 8. Now we have 2, 8 year old hens that have been laying a 4-6 weeks in the spring after their combs turn a bright red. We also have 3 new hens just over 1 y/o that lay plenty of eggs for the 2 of us. I give eggs to my friends as gifts and to our neighbors when they ask but don't sell eggs. If any eggs get too old, I hard boil and feed them to the hens for extra protein.
 

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Thanks for the great article.
I too will keep my chickens long after they stop laying. They are a joy to have around. I will have to convince the city to let me keep more than 3 chickens so that there will always be some eggs.
 
I like the concept of naming things; in this case my chickens. But, ultimately I will have so many I am not sure even I can keep it all straight let alone expecting them to. I love the idea though. I should wind up with 43 chicks all together by mid October. Oy vey, do ya think it would work with the naming thing? :bun
In an elementary school classroom, the number can range from 30 to 40 and the teacher knows everyone by name so maybe.
 
thank you for this wonderful article! me and my family love this group! indeed my family and i are with you! im 48 years and I cannot remember a time without flocks in my house. Like you we keep and care for our wise ladies until they naturally die ( nature calls them to perform another role... a recent loss piru lived 11 years and at the last year she successfully hacked a nest, incubated the eggs and had two wonderful girls piru-rosa and piru-margarita). I am totally blind and from the warm caribbean and my family couldnt explain to me why in one the pictures of your golden ladies one of them has a cloth on top of her...we apologise for our curiosity! good article and we need more!
 
Out of an original flock of 12 I have 2 remaining Welsummer hens, soon turning 11 years old.They were never very good layers and quit much earlier than any noted in this forum. But they have integrated into the animal household and we know each other quite well. Total pet status. The article is encouraging about introducing new chicks that I have hesitated about, concerned about seniority aggression. I also look forward to experiencing a different breed that might be a more persistent layer!
 
My daughter had gotten some hens however they got killed by the coyotes but I still want to have a bunch of chickens. I want hens. I was told that there is a rooster that doesn't crow much if at all. My husband being a truck driver he has a very strange sleep schedule. Thanks for this wonderful article, I greatly appreciate it.
 
M
In an elementary school classroom, the number can range from 30 to 40 and the teacher knows everyone by name so maybe.
Yes, but children respond rather sharply if you call them the wrong name. And they look quite different from one another. :):):)
 
Thank you. Honestly, your article couldn't come at a better time. After years of patiently waiting to have my first flock, we made the jump in late 2020 and got our girls in January of 2021. Since we're in a city in Southern California, we're allowed only up to 5 hens, no roos, so we went for four. Two black australorps and two silkies. I just lost the oldest silkie to impacted crop - it was a sad day as she had been the first layer, a pro broody queen, but she was a great girl. We had lost one of the australorps during the first molt last year - and I always wondered about her - she just didn't seem as robust as her sister, and water belly got her. So here we are, with one black silkie and one black australorp. It's a wacky combo, a soot sprite and a giant girl. I have noticed some definitely slowing of egg production after a very prolific laying period. I have always thought to myself that when the girls concluded their egg production years, how shall I continue to spoil them and make the best of the situation? This beautifully written piece has solidified some of the things I had been wanting to do for them, and given me insight to some other thoughts. THANK YOU!!!! <3
 
Great article! I always planned on keeping my hens until their final flight to the great coop in the sky! It is good to hear they will still lay into their golden years. I have six hens total, three I inherited at about a year old , and I believe they are four years old now. The other three are just 2 1/2, still babes in my eyes.
 
I am old and retired and probably unable to be productive in any consistent and dependable way. Therefore, I am glad I am not going to be butchered and fed to the hogs or used (prematurely) as fertilizer for the daisies. Thus, I am extending the same compassionate favor to my hens. I will feed them and care for them until they die naturally. Actually, being a male, I am also grateful that I have not been killed and butchered when I was young, tender and juicy, just because it would only take one (lucky) man to fertilize a large number of females to ensure the continuation of the species. Unfortunately, this is done with surplus roosters, when they haven't even reached their first birthday. Actually, I find disgraceful what is done to male chicks by the chicken and egg industry, where after the experts have "sexed" the chicks, the females can grow up and begin their career of narrowly confined egg layers, but destined to leave those cages in a year or two to be butchered. The male chicks instead are run--alive!--through gigantic meat grinders to be tranformed into meal for fertilizer or pet food.
No, I am not an animal rights activist. I hunt, and I have butchered as humanely as possible (.22 L.R. bullet in the back of the head) quite a few chickens, and I have also dispatched many a predator caught near my chicken pens. But I called it quits (not on hunting). My surplus roosters and my elderly hens are safe. Their numbers are now dwindling. Some are about 8 years old. Now and then one of them goes to Heaven (Heav-hen?) and is quickly removed. Within three years my chicken houses and pens will be empty. It was a nice experience, and I am already buying the many eggs my wife and I consume. The occasional couple of eggs I find in the laying boxes (at times two or three days go without my finding any at all) are just a bonus, a welcome present from my tired old hens...
Well spoken and thank you! I started keeping chickens two years ago but did research yrs prior by joining chicken groups to learn from those who lived it. I started with 5- fast forward I have many. I have taken in hens from a hoarding situation locally, and these ladies are old. I open my heart and coop to take in ladies that most likely would not be laying eggs. But, to give them space, sunlight, grass to walk in..sigh... I would hope to have someone extend such a kindness to me in my old age. We also foster "live evidence" chicken for local shelter as cruelty cases come in. I watch as their feathers come back, life returns to their eyes and slowly they learn to trust. Isn't always rainbows and roses but it is a life being with a soul - kindness matter. Yes, I do eat our eggs (I don't eat meat) but my chickens aren't slaves to me to produce or ELSE. We do keep the new chickens separate for several weeks or even longer and they see a vet before anyone asks.
 
I was having such a hard day and then I read this and it gave me a moment of joy. Thank you so much for sharing your experience and your Pictures!! Your girls are so beautiful 😍 my oldest girls are four years old and my dad always said when we started that I'd have to kill girls when they get old but I know now I can't do that. I've spent 4 years with them and have grown so close to them. I hope my girls live as long as they can
 
Glad to hear I am not the only one. The older generations like my grandfather who lived through the depression, cannot understand allowing them to live out their lives without laying eggs. I plan to do the same as you note in your article.

I have three eight year olds. I just lost one of the eight year olds this week. She was having a very hard molt. I still have two 8 year olds, one 6 year old, and six 4 year olds.

My four year olds are my final clutch. I plan to travel in my later years and don’t want to have to worry about my girls.

My question is what happens when they die of old age leaving only one chicken left. I know they are flocking animals. The likelihood of the last two dying together is slim unless a disease or something kills them all as a flock.

I am hoping and praying that that will not happen. What do you do when you only have one hen left?
 
I am old and retired and probably unable to be productive in any consistent and dependable way. Therefore, I am glad I am not going to be butchered and fed to the hogs or used (prematurely) as fertilizer for the daisies. Thus, I am extending the same compassionate favor to my hens. I will feed them and care for them until they die naturally. Actually, being a male, I am also grateful that I have not been killed and butchered when I was young, tender and juicy, just because it would only take one (lucky) man to fertilize a large number of females to ensure the continuation of the species. Unfortunately, this is done with surplus roosters, when they haven't even reached their first birthday. Actually, I find disgraceful what is done to male chicks by the chicken and egg industry, where after the experts have "sexed" the chicks, the females can grow up and begin their career of narrowly confined egg layers, but destined to leave those cages in a year or two to be butchered. The male chicks instead are run--alive!--through gigantic meat grinders to be tranformed into meal for fertilizer or pet food.
No, I am not an animal rights activist. I hunt, and I have butchered as humanely as possible (.22 L.R. bullet in the back of the head) quite a few chickens, and I have also dispatched many a predator caught near my chicken pens. But I called it quits (not on hunting). My surplus roosters and my elderly hens are safe. Their numbers are now dwindling. Some are about 8 years old. Now and then one of them goes to Heaven (Heav-hen?) and is quickly removed. Within three years my chicken houses and pens will be empty. It was a nice experience, and I am already buying the many eggs my wife and I consume. The occasional couple of eggs I find in the laying boxes (at times two or three days go without my finding any at all) are just a bonus, a welcome present from my tired old hens...
I loved reading this. You're a wonderful man and a good steward of your flock.
 
This is beautifully written. This is one of the two most beautiful pieces I’ve ever read (on ALL topics). The other is also on this thread.

It’s interesting to me that I found both these pieces in a group about backyard poultry. Perhaps these little creatures cause us to reflect inwardly and, somehow, make us better humans.

Thank you for this beautiful insight into God’s glorious creation. He DID notice it wasn’t good for man to be alone. Not only did he then create woman but he put Adam in charge of all of His creation and TOGETHER they were ALL fruitful and multiplied and filled the earth. God meant us to live WITH the animals for a reason.
 

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