sjturner79
Songster
To sjturner79 .... Thank you for your response.
I have looked at dry rabbit tucker, considering it to be ( perhaps !! ) something slightly different and interesting for the girls, rather than the scratch mix they get every few days. Being that is like feeding them a McDonalds diet, I don't do much in the way of scratch mix for them - only 2 or 3 days a week - a handful or two. But, as mentioned, I have never succumbed to buying it for them.
I must remember to take my reading glasses next time at a large supermarket, and read the ingredients of rabbit and guinea pig food.
Their complete food is layer pellets and anything / everything else is a treat thing.
I would NEVER give my chickens, cat food, although some do. It is designed for cats, ( both dry and wet ) and is not at all good even for dogs !! .... let alone chickens. .......... Nope.
Dog food is not good for cats either. It's the vitamin and mineral additives in them that make them so different. I do feed the girls cooked meat - and will up that this week for more protein.
( I feed my dog Blackhawk holistic diet ... chicken and rice. Found the lamb and rice heated her blood up too much ( red meat can do that ) ... and she started scratching like a mad thing, with no fleas to cause the problem. Backed off that, onto Supercoat for one bag full - which has little meat, but a fair amount of grain in it ( not good for long term ), but it seemed to do the job. .... she stopped scratching and is now back onto Blackhawk chicken and rice - on which she will stay. I add to that, a raw egg a couple of times a week, a bit of cheese here and there, and some tuna in olive oil ... again, here and there. )
But, as this is a chicken thread, I had best stick to chickens !!![]()
And you sjtturner79, or someone else, may be able to assist with a query. I have read and believe, that chickens have a 'limit' to their egg producing abilities. i.e. they have just so many eggs to produce, and then there's an end to it. Also have read that the larger the chicken, the more inclined they might be to quit laying earlier than others. I have scrounged around via Google but cannot find much information about Welsummers and when / if they cease to lay. ??
Mandy Welsummer is one huge chook. She eats well, drinks her water and stands upright with tail erect ( a while back she was rather sad and floppy, but she got over that ). She is the only chicken I have that drags her moult into months .... she is sooo slow. So I am thinking, it is her almost half a year moult that has stopped her laying. Will only know if that is the case when Spring arrives. She is still shedding feathers, but also growing new ones.![]()
Just one of my 3 chickens is providing eggs at the moment - about 5 per week, and that is Molly RIR. Strange looking eggs for her - speckled ( ?? ) and not her normal lovely baby pink colour.... but it IS Molly who is laying them. Maybe Mandy has taught her how to speckle spray eggs ????![]()
Mindy Araucana will begin again soon, as she is developing her new feathers now, and is already interested in making a nest !! ... she's a hard task master at laying. But poor Mandy .... ? Nothing from her since December.
The runs are overshadowed ( even though Neil has cut a lot back ) by a ginormous elm tree, owned by the back neighbours. So during summer, there is not much daylight gets in, as the sun is high in the sky, and the tree is heavy with foliage. But as we approach winter, the sun is lowering, and the elm leaves are falling so there will be plenty of sunlight for them over winter and spring and into early summer.. sunlight is already filtering into the runs ...
Perhaps I had best just shut up and wait for Spring ... eh ? Meantime, if anyone has any other suggestions, would appreciate them.
Apologies for the long post ......
Cheers .... and thank you.
...........
While it is true that an overy will only produce a set number of eggs during the life (no matter what the species), I don't think Mandy would be near the limit yet. The bit about larger chooks making less eggs is only based on the selective breeding-- it is better if a bird raised solely for it meat lays less eggs.
The other factor is the longer per year a bird moults, the more years they lay for, so with a 6 month moult per year I would expect a good 10 years of laying from her.