Oh no way?? I thought your youngest child gave the dog all the eggs?? I must of missed a few post.. Oh and by the way,, blue eggs from blondie

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Oh no way?? I thought your youngest child gave the dog all the eggs?? I must of missed a few post.. Oh and by the way,, blue eggs from blondie
Thank you Gallo. My hopes of selling most of my extra cockerels as processed birds is not working out too well. I am not even making any money off them, most of them process out between 3 and 5 pounds (maybe those Barred Rocks will be bigger) so at most $25 a bird and with all the feed going into them and my labor to process...I would like to get some of my feed bill money back.
???Pipemom If one of the birds, in this case the hen, lays blue eggs, then more than half of the lifespans will inherit the blue eggs gene but approx 25% will not lay blue eggs. Naturally better results will come from both parents having the blue egg gene. But you could start you EE flock by using the Russian Orloff Rooster. Do you have any hens that lay blue eggs ?
molting more than likely. Tho you should check them closely for feather mites or lice (check right under the vent, under the wings and along the neck for little bugs). A little extra protein the next few weeks will help them grow their feathers in faster. Also most birds slow down or even stop laying while molting as well as when the days get shorter. Chickens need so many hours of daylight to lay eggs.So, the egg production has really dropped off. We went from 7-8 eggs everyday since they started laying in June to only 5 on a good day and most days only 4.
I have noticed a lot of feathers in the run.
Other than the weather, nothing else has changed. Same food and so on.
They were hatched last week of January so they are nearly 10 months.
???
Quote: The ameraucana should have had two copies of the gene, therefore all her chicks should have inherited it. Now 8 chicks is far too small a sample to expect correct ratios of 50/50 if the ameraucana had only had a single copy, but I'm a bit surprised...
molting more than likely. Tho you should check them closely for feather mites or lice (check right under the vent, under the wings and along the neck for little bugs). A little extra protein the next few weeks will help them grow their feathers in faster. Also most birds slow down or even stop laying while molting as well as when the days get shorter. Chickens need so many hours of daylight to lay eggs.
Oh no way?? I thought your youngest child gave the dog all the eggs?? I must of missed a few post..
Oh and by the way,, blue eggs from blondiee