25 chickens and NO EGGS??

Jebyballard

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I know from reading the forum posts that hens require time to lay. However, my hens should be old enough now and there are still no eggs. Additionally, I purchased older hens that were laying subsrquent to joining my flock and they are now not laying either. Can they all really hold those eggs in?!
What might I be doing wrong?
I am feeding layer feed, oyster shell and scratch. They have plenty of water, the free range and are calm and protected all day. My boyfriend says they live a five star life with absolutely no return on the investment.
Any ideas as to what might be holding them up?
I would really appreciate any ideas from the crowd.
 
No, I don't think they have a nest hidden anywhere but I sure can look again. I also have guineas in there. They all grew up together. I wonder if the guineas have anything to do with it?
 
I know from reading the forum posts that hens require time to lay. However, my hens should be old enough now and there are still no eggs. Additionally, I purchased older hens that were laying subsrquent to joining my flock and they are now not laying either. Can they all really hold those eggs in?!
What might I be doing wrong?
I am feeding layer feed, oyster shell and scratch. They have plenty of water, the free range and are calm and protected all day. My boyfriend says they live a five star life with absolutely no return on the investment.
Any ideas as to what might be holding them up?
I would really appreciate any ideas from the crowd.
How much scratch are they getting. I know when mine get more than they need, they will stop. Are they free ranged all day and have a place to move from one area to the other as the grounds and vegatation change? Do they get layer pellets or crumles? I don't see any protien in their diet if this is all they're offered and don't have a good source of free range area. . And how old are they? I've had birds that didn't start laying until 14 months. One was even 23 months. Just couldn't not get an egg from her.
 
how long have you had them for? the colder climates will stop them from laying also adding new chickens to the flock will put them of the lay and if they have had a big scare like cows they will stop producing for a while.
 
The free range anywhere they want all day long. Our neighbors all have grasshoppers devestating their crops and I haven't seen a grasshopper all year so I think the bugs are a source of protein. I just got a beand new non-GMO organic layer feed and will add that as well. I just wonder if there's something else.
 
The free range anywhere they want all day long. Our neighbors all have grasshoppers devestating their crops and I haven't seen a grasshopper all year so I think the bugs are a source of protein. I just got a beand new non-GMO organic layer feed and will add that as well. I just wonder if there's something else.
I don't think its a feed issue, you are giving them ample to eat, especially with the free-ranging!

I am still going with concealed nest (maybe on your neighbor's property). They may not know where their nest box is if you have never gotten an egg from them so they are going to the safest place they know. Points to ponder: Have you ever seen them go to the nest box and seen them sit there? Have you ever heard the egg-song coming from your property or the free-range area? If you don't know what it sounds like then you can porobably pull up one off the web and give a listen. Another point to consider is they may be laying but a predator ( this includes, wild, domestic, guineas, chickens and humans) is finding the eggs and eating the eggs overnight so you don't see them when you look. Look for a nest-like place with no eggs.

So here is what I would do:
-Place dummy eggs in the next box/es that you want them to use
-Keep them confined for several days with access to those boxes. They will be grumpy and a noisy rabble waiting to get out because thats what they are used to. You really need to determine if any eggs are being laid and to also get them retrained. Its only temporary.
-If the above two do not yield eggs, replace the dummy eggs in the nest with store-bought eggs. After 24 hours are they still there? If not you have an egg eater/eaters that are eating the eggs as they are laid. You will need to identify the culprit and remove them from the flock.
-Do several very, very careful search for the nest/nests. There was one person I remember reading about that had a bunch of free-range hens and their eggs dried up over time. They had done searches and found nothing. The last search revealed hundreds of eggs on a derelict truck's cab floorboards. They had gotten in through a cracked window and that became their repository. I had walked by the red-wagon nest many times and did not see it--I only found it because a hen went missing for two days and I needed to try to find her body so my daughter could have closure and after all that grief she had gone broody and was sitting on the clutch of 16 eggs. Under the wagon. So not only had I missed the nest but I had missed the broody on the nest for two day and countless passes.

Good Luck!
 
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Thank you so very much for your helpful suggestions. We are on our way out now to comb the acreage for nests. I did listen to a uTube egg song and I think at least one hen may be singing. Here's hoping!
Again, thank you for taking the time to share your own experience and knowledge!
 
If they free range they usually decide they can find a better spot to lay than the nest box. If you can't find the nest(s), confine them to the coop for a few days.
 

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