Rough overview of chicken plans...
April 1 chicks in.
May 13, 6wks, start transition to grower feed.
May 27, 8wks, evaluate hens and roos.
June 3, 9wks butcher FR roos (and fat hens as needed).
July 22, 16wks, evaluate hens and roos. Butcher roos.
Aug 5, 18wks, earliest egg watch.
Aug 19, 20wks, should be eggs or soon starting.
I looked over mcmurray site again. They have a list of the egg laying for the breeds: best, better, good, fair. Eggs per year... eggs per week.
Best: 281-365... 5-7
Better: 221-280... 4-5
Good: 151-220... 3-4
Fair: 150 or less... 3 or less
The breeds available in the brown layer/all heavies mixes I got...
Best: red/black star, australorp, RIR.
Better: barred rock, light brahma, new hampshire, silver lace wyandotte, turken, white orpington, white giant.
Good: white/columbian wyandotte, black giant, buff orpington, sussex, white/partridge/buff rock, delaware, dark cornish.
Estimating the hens I get will average 4 eggs per week... times 20 hens... about 11 eggs per day and maybe 80 eggs per week. 5 eggs per week average would be about 14 per day and maybe 100 per week. Going to be lots of eggs!
The FR are also in the 3-4 per week average. So lets say 10 hens... 4-6 eggs per day and 28-42 eggs per week. This is why I'm thinking they should be in their own chickshaw. I don't know how sturdy they will be and if any broiler influence is going to come from them then I'll need to optimize how many of their eggs are incubated. Whereas the other hens should lay and be healthy for at least two years.
Starting the lay in August though... Even if I collect eggs Sept 1-10.. Set on Sept 11.. Hatching Oct 1.. That's not ideal for Ohio weather. Depending on how the year goes october is like late sept, november is fall, and december is suddenly winter.. Or in october we get tons of rain and some light snow and november dumps us right into actual winter weather. Plus how long will they lay without supplemented lighting, which I don't want to do.
Darn... That was not ideal... The Oct 1 hatched chicks would then be 20wks in mid Feb. Soon as the light comes they'd be ready to start laying. And any nice meaty roos would be ready to breed over the mixed hens for 2022 hatchings. This time next year I'd be waiting for egg production to pick up and be ready to hatch the next generation.
Ohhh there's a thought... If so I could have the first cross FR hatch and then plan to order a batch of FR hens... No, they only ship through August so that wouldn't work. Darn that would have worked out just perfect if I could have ordered FR hens for the same time and had them ready too! I mean, raising chicks in winter is not ideal but for hatching all year it would have lined up nice.
If the FR hens prove to be hardy and regular-chicken-like then who knows, maybe I'll have nice hens and all next year to collect and hatch from them.