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I did not have time to read all the responses and so do not know if someone already mentioned this or not. If you have a blue seal dealer where you live, you could switch to something like breeder pellets and offer oyster shell in a separate feeder free choice. If not blue seal, then you could go to purina flockraiser with free choice shell.
I have always mixed purina layena and flock raiser 50/50 and never had a problem with shell hardness. I am of the belief that even hens do not need as much calcium as feed companies like to advertise. The reason for this (I believe) was to serve the commercial market wanting unusually hard eggs to hold up to all the traveling and abuse a store bought egg has to endure. I think they have gotten carried away with the calcium and IMPO is entirely too much and more than they could ever get on a daily basis naturally. Ive seen hens in the old days raised on just spilled corn and wheat and whatever they could scratch up. The soft shell egg was very rare.
I did not have time to read all the responses and so do not know if someone already mentioned this or not. If you have a blue seal dealer where you live, you could switch to something like breeder pellets and offer oyster shell in a separate feeder free choice. If not blue seal, then you could go to purina flockraiser with free choice shell.
I have always mixed purina layena and flock raiser 50/50 and never had a problem with shell hardness. I am of the belief that even hens do not need as much calcium as feed companies like to advertise. The reason for this (I believe) was to serve the commercial market wanting unusually hard eggs to hold up to all the traveling and abuse a store bought egg has to endure. I think they have gotten carried away with the calcium and IMPO is entirely too much and more than they could ever get on a daily basis naturally. Ive seen hens in the old days raised on just spilled corn and wheat and whatever they could scratch up. The soft shell egg was very rare.


