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As long as you are offering them good quality layer feed and, hopefully, some free-choice oyster shell or crushed egg shells (as they need lots of calcium for the shells)... there's no need to worry yet. Give her some time. I have a hen, not the broody, that recently stopped laying, too. She apparently needed a break to refresh her shell gland. She had been laying, then stopped for about a week suddenly. During the break she laid a couple shell-less eggs from the roost at night (which were consumed by the others in the flock, yuk!) Anyway, after a week or so, she started laying good hard-shelled eggs again, in the nest as usual.
During formation, the egg spends the bulk of its time, 20+ hours, in the shell gland of the hen's oviduct -- being covered in layers of liquid calcium carbonate and pigment. I'm no expert, but I sense the shell gland, at times, needs to rest and refresh.
As long as you are offering them good quality layer feed and, hopefully, some free-choice oyster shell or crushed egg shells (as they need lots of calcium for the shells)... there's no need to worry yet. Give her some time. I have a hen, not the broody, that recently stopped laying, too. She apparently needed a break to refresh her shell gland. She had been laying, then stopped for about a week suddenly. During the break she laid a couple shell-less eggs from the roost at night (which were consumed by the others in the flock, yuk!) Anyway, after a week or so, she started laying good hard-shelled eggs again, in the nest as usual.
During formation, the egg spends the bulk of its time, 20+ hours, in the shell gland of the hen's oviduct -- being covered in layers of liquid calcium carbonate and pigment. I'm no expert, but I sense the shell gland, at times, needs to rest and refresh.