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My Australorps have stopped laying. It is winter, but I light on timers, and they free-range and should be happy. I have 20 and haven't had an egg for nearly 3 weeks. I have two dorkings who are laying one a day. Could it be that the australorps are larger birds and need a higher protein diet to produce? Has anyone experienced this issue? Any solutions? Ideas?
RattlesnakeRidgeWV - I'm very slow on the response from last week. I just learned how to
update photos to this spot.
The last photo here is from today of my little so called yellow padded
foot australorp. We got all three on 10/8/12. She was approx a week or two older than the RIR and
about a week older than the so called americauna (which I now am learning is likely an easter egger)
Regardless of what I have. I am THRILLED with my girls. Just curious what I actually have.
"Ninja" (named by my grandson) is the only one showing any sign of red/waddles. The other
two have pale combs and no waddles. You mentioned that Ninja may actually be a cockerel. Are
you able to tell from these photos #1 if she's a she and #2 if she's a mix to include Jersey Giant
given the yellow bottoms of her feet?
Thanks to anyone able to provide me some insight. Loving this new experience :>
Just wondering what state you live in..mine take a short break in winter but usually the first back in the egg boxes..if somthing scared them, that could aggravate things..if I have 20 birds it might drop to 7 eggs or so for couple weeks..them starts to increase..sometimes they get so uncomfortably cold that they go on strike for a little while..
Katie,
I might have missed it though, how old are your 20 BA's? In my experience it depends when they are born. When I hatch early say Dec. Jan or feb. my girls lay early and keep laying all winter. When I hatch late like beggining of summer they take longer to lay sometimes waiting to early spring. I have seen BA's lay as early as 20 weeks to 28 weeks depending on when they were born. All bets are off when you talk over a year old and the major molts take over. If the molt starts early you are golden. If the molt is late they can take a while to get back on track. I have seen 1 month to a two month full blown molt with only a couple of eggs. My BA's are still better layers than my SLW's, EE, or my wives mutts. I think that northern birds molt earlier than southern birds due to the earlier drop in temperature. Just my opinion and I am far from an expert. Hope this helps.
Quote: It isn't the cold that stops them, it is the amount of day light.
The days are getting longer, so you should start getting eggs again later this month. My EO Basque have started back up already. The BAs get supplemental light so they are laying some now.
Quote: Another way to tell is by how far the comb goes to the back of the head. Look at the roos; the comb goes way back. The hens stop at about 3/4 of the way back.