Chickens lay at night or not?

Rosecoop

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I have been doing quite a bit of reading throughout the forums and have come across this question...Do chickens lay at night? I read on one thread that a member said they don't lay after sunset and another member say they are "probably passing the eggs at night". Is it true that chickens only lay in daytime hours and not at night, or is there an exception to the rule? My girls aren't even close to laying, as they are only 2 weeks old. But I want to be prepared...the less surprises the better, lol. Thanks.

Mike
 
Chickens do not lay or do much of anything really, including eating or drinking, after dark. They won't even stir if a predator enters the coop and starts killing everything. That's why a secure coop is so important. If someone finds eggs under the roost (common for new layers), they were probably laid very early in the morning.
 
As a rule, they lay during daylight, but there are always exceptions. Occasionally one will pass during the night, I'll find it broken under the roost. It isn't common and frequent. Just happens sometimes and doesn't mean anything is wrong.

Some of my birds lay their eggs in the morning, some in the afternoon. Every chicken has its own schedule. And it can change.
 
Thank you so much friend! Man I love learning "chicken"!
 
Chickens have extremely poor night vision so they don't move much at night. If they don't let you pick them up when they are out and about during the day, wait til night time and you can walk right up to them on the roost and pick them up. Mine recognize my voice so it doesn't scare them when I'm in the coop and they can't see whats happening. They don't try to run away when I pick them up like they do if they are out in the yard and don't feel like being bothered with me. (Hint: using one of those flashlights that's attached to the head-band thing lets you keep both hands free for doing things like health/wellness inspection on the birds) They basically sit on the roosting bar and poop all night long. Once I went out for my nightly head count, then came back about 20 minutes later to refill the water and saw an egg on the floor under the roost that wasn't there 20 minutes prior. I assumed the chicken passed it since it comes out the vent just like poo does. I'm guessing it felt something there and had the urge to push it out. Only ever saw that once. Birds will not get off the roost to go to a nesting box to lay an egg though.
 
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For different reasons most eggs are laid in the morning but they can be laid any time of the day. It takes an egg “about” 25 hours (there is a lot of leeway in that about) to go through a hen’s internal egg making factory. Most hens release the yolk for the next egg “about” (there is that word again) 20 minutes after the egg is laid. So it’s normal that a hen will lay a little later each day. Part of the trigger that causes a hen to release that yolk to start the next egg is daylight. If it is too late in the day the hen won’t release a yolk and will skip laying the next day. I’ve seen hens on the nest laying when the others were going to bed. Normally a hen will not lay after dark though, the daylight trigger to start the yolk prevents that.

I’ve had hens that lay exactly the same time each day, in the morning. Whatever the triggers to release that yolk are and how long it takes for her to get her egg through that internal factory it works out to 24 hours. Some hens don’t lay every day, maybe once every two or three days. These normally lay in the morning because of the daylight trigger to release the yolk.

A lot of people confuse a pullet just starting to lay to a hen that is an established layer. There are a lot of parts to a hen’s internal egg making factory. Most get it right to start with but some pullets just don’t have full control of that process when they start. An established laying hen should have full control. It is not unusual for a pullet just starting to lay to drop an egg wherever she happens to be, on the roost at night or just walking around. Again most pullets get it right to start with but it is not unusual for a pullets first eggs to be soft-shelled, no-shelled, extremely hard-shelled, yolk only, whites only, double yolked, or otherwise pretty darn weird. It just takes them a while to get all the kinks out of that internal egg making factory. There is nothing to be worried about in all this, it should clear up in a few days, a couple of weeks at the most.

As Chiques Chicks said there are always exceptions but the majority of the eggs laid under the roosts are there because a pullet just starting to lay accidentally dropped an egg overnight. I did have a pullet that continuously laid her eggs from the roosts at night. It took me two months to figure out which one was doing that. Really frustrating. I permanently removed her from the flock because there was something wrong with her instincts.
 
Wow...lot's of info there, lol. I really appreciate it!!
 
I have been doing quite a bit of reading throughout the forums and have come across this question...Do chickens lay at night? I read on one thread that a member said they don't lay after sunset and another member say they are "probably passing the eggs at night". Is it true that chickens only lay in daytime hours and not at night, or is there an exception to the rule? My girls aren't even close to laying, as they are only 2 weeks old. But I want to be prepared...the less surprises the better, lol. Thanks.

Mike
Day time
 

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