Colorado

I have a hen that is laying eggs with some noduoles or protruding rough spots on them. Does anyone know what could be the cause? Here is a picture. Maybe too much calcium? I have been supplementing them with some oyster shells as I have one laying really thin egg shells.

It is just excess calcium. does your feed have enough in it already? If so, you don't necessarily have to make it available unless you notice a problem with soft shells. Since you do have one laying thin shells, I'd keep it available to them and take it away when you stop finding the thin shells if these eggs bug you. Since we've started giving the girls the recycled egg shells (baked to dry and then ground up small) instead of the oyster shell we don't see so many pimples. I think it has to do with the shells having a smaller calcium content, so it's harder for them to overdo it. I could be wrong, it could just be coincidence. Unfortunately, with the geese coming into lay we've burned through our stockpile of shells and had to go buy oyster shell.
 
OMG! I need a chicken intervention! Someone stop me!!! I'm seriously considering adding a silkie baby. I'm already over my chicken limit for my zoning!
barnie.gif
The way I read the regulation. You can have as many as you want as long as they are no older than 4 months. You are only allowed 10 that are older than 4 months and no roosters in city limits. That is if you have enough space for them all. Its a trade off, you get a new one and an older one has to go. Chicken math is a horrible thing. I have 13 now myself. Its a goog thing I am in the county.
 
The way I read the regulation. You can have as many as you want as long as they are no older than 4 months. You are only allowed 10 that are older than 4 months and no roosters in city limits. That is if you have enough space for them all. Its a trade off, you get a new one and an older one has to go. Chicken math is a horrible thing. I have 13 now myself. Its a goog thing I am in the county.
*6 months or older. That's how I am managing my started pullets for sale. List at 4.5-5 months and have them sold by 6.

Article 7, subsection 6.7.106
http://www.sterlingcodifiers.com/CO/Colorado Springs/index.htm
 
The great addiction... I would say don't get a Silkie if for no other reason than they are only sold S/R and if your luck is anything like mine you will end up with a boy I need of a new home.

Well these are my first chicks. They are all supposed to be pullets, but I guess I will find out when they get a bit older. I generally have bad luck in all things, but maybe I have good chicken luck? Maybe that just means that I need two silkies. HAHA! I am the girl that bought a random duck on an impulse because they were cute.
 
It is just excess calcium. does your feed have enough in it already? If so, you don't necessarily have to make it available unless you notice a problem with soft shells. Since you do have one laying thin shells, I'd keep it available to them and take it away when you stop finding the thin shells if these eggs bug you. Since we've started giving the girls the recycled egg shells (baked to dry and then ground up small) instead of the oyster shell we don't see so many pimples. I think it has to do with the shells having a smaller calcium content, so it's harder for them to overdo it. I could be wrong, it could just be coincidence. Unfortunately, with the geese coming into lay we've burned through our stockpile of shells and had to go buy oyster shell.
That is what i was thinking. They get their egg shells recycled back to them also. It just looks wierd. This is the 3rd egg I have seen this way in 4 months of laying, so thats not bad.
 
I have a hen that is laying eggs with some noduoles or protruding rough spots on them. Does anyone know what could be the cause? Here is a picture. Maybe too much calcium? I have been supplementing them with some oyster shells as I have one laying really thin egg shells.
Is she a new layer? we have noticed this on eggs from new layers, but it usually goes away after a few eggs.
 
The way I read the regulation. You can have as many as you want as long as they are no older than 4 months. You are only allowed 10 that are older than 4 months and no roosters in city limits. That is if you have enough space for them all. Its a trade off, you get a new one and an older one has to go. Chicken math is a horrible thing. I have 13 now myself. Its a goog thing I am in the county.

Well I am actually outside the city limits. I live east of springs ranch outside the limits in El Paso county. I called for zoning though, and it's a max of 10 chickens. I'm zone RS-5000 (I think ???) They didn't say anything about the ages. I don't actually have any intention of letting them go though. LOL - HOPEFULLY I just don't get in trouble. My neighbors love me??? haha

My thoughts are, Silkies are only as big as half a chicken. I know I am no help at all!!!

Ha - absolutely no help at all. I tried to get my friend to talk to me out of it. She just said, "AWWWW they're so cute. I vote yes."
*6 months or older. That's how I am managing my started pullets for sale. List at 4.5-5 months and have them sold by 6.

Article 7, subsection 6.7.106
http://www.sterlingcodifiers.com/CO/Colorado Springs/index.htm

That's really interesting to know. If someone says something I'll downsize. I have a friend in Fountain with a small flock who would take some in.


Logic would then be to get two!
Agreed!
 

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