The first two girls in our flock of 13 began laying a month ago and we were so incredibly excited. They have both had no problem laying in a nesting box, and have been consistent layers. Our Easter Egger, Aire, has been laying for 24 days now, and in the first 21 she gave us 17 healthy eggs in the nesting box. But then three days ago she dropped an Egg Bomb from her spot on the roost!
You can see here that the egg shell was brittle and soft. Most of the other girls are molting right now, so we have them on a diet that is higher in protein. I was worried this may have been depriving Aire from getting enough calcium, so we put out some oyster shells in a separate hopper. The next day (yesterday), she left us an egg IN the nesting box, but it was deformed. The shell was more brittle than those on her previous eggs have been, and had a weird pinched circle on one side. The yolk and albumen were normal (and delicious.)
Then today, I went out to ANOTHER egg bomb! I wont put you through another poopy picture, but once again, the shell was very thin and "soft." It also appears her poop was mushy both those days, although, I'm not sure if this might have been caused by the raw egg seeping into it, because they were certainly mixed.
Is this just a calcium deficiency problem that will sort itself out now that we've put out an additional calcium source?
You can see here that the egg shell was brittle and soft. Most of the other girls are molting right now, so we have them on a diet that is higher in protein. I was worried this may have been depriving Aire from getting enough calcium, so we put out some oyster shells in a separate hopper. The next day (yesterday), she left us an egg IN the nesting box, but it was deformed. The shell was more brittle than those on her previous eggs have been, and had a weird pinched circle on one side. The yolk and albumen were normal (and delicious.)
Then today, I went out to ANOTHER egg bomb! I wont put you through another poopy picture, but once again, the shell was very thin and "soft." It also appears her poop was mushy both those days, although, I'm not sure if this might have been caused by the raw egg seeping into it, because they were certainly mixed.
Is this just a calcium deficiency problem that will sort itself out now that we've put out an additional calcium source?