Wow, it's been a long time since I checked in! So much fun to read the first egg stories...congratulations to all!
So many posts worrying about when the first egg will come... let me tell you about Velcro. I bought six baby chicks last October, an EE named Brownie, a silver laced Wyandotte (Lacey), australorp "Jemima", black Cochin "Apple" (because she has rounded corners LOL), a silver laced red Wyandotte who was ultimately named "Pretty Boy" and now lives on a farm, and lastly, my barred rock 'Velcro'. Of my five hens, four began laying in their twenty something weeks but Velcro would not lay. She is definitely a girl, but she would not lay. We postulated many reasons...she was alpha and taking over in the absence of a rooster, she was eggbound, she was a mutant...ad infinitum. Out of the blue at 11 MONTHS old, Velcro laid her first egg...a tiny little thing that we thought was Velcro just sticking her tongue out at us. But she continues to lay and her eggs are now normal sized. So, for those of you panicking because your chicks are 24 weeks old and not laying, sometimes a hen just needs 48 weeks to make up her mind.
:cd
They don't all lay every day though...I can get anywhere from 1 to 5 eggs a day and there's no pattern I've been able to discern. Probably my daily average gathering is three. It's enough that we give away to friends constantly.
Chickens are just freaking hilarious. Yes, they all want the same nesting box and they make the weirdest noises when discussing ownership of same. The other day I peeked in when Velcro was on the nest and she honked at me...no other word can describe it. A couple of them use laying as an excuse for spa time...they will sit for a long long time. They love love love the dirt box I made them...they all get in and fling the dirt around and then settle in for a good dirt bath and nap. Sometimes the way they stretch out on their sides and close their eyes they look dead...scary the first time I saw one fully lounged out! Great fun to fling in a handful of crickets...they are serious hunters.
In a year's time we have been so lucky...no disease, no bad eggs, no deaths or wounds, no serious squabbling or bad behavior. They aren't much for cuddling but they follow me around...the whole flock...whenever I'm out while they're free ranging. Except for a few accidents, they go back to the coop and lay their eggs in the nest box (they have three nest boxes but they may as well just have one because they only use one...whichever one the first layer of the day chooses) and, my favorite thing of all, they put themselves to bed. Even if I forget to gather them into the run after free ranging, they all take themselves to the coop in the evening. They arrange themselves on their roosts and quietly mutter to themselves about the day while they wait for me to remember to come and lock their security gate.
I've been very very lucky with my chick chicks....now if only they didn't poop so danged much......