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I don't know as using lights to keep a fairly constant amount of "daylight" would cause a problem. I sure wouldn't want them to be on 24/7 but use them to give them a constant 14-16 hrs of light per day should be okay.
If you've gone through watching one hen after another die from egg peritonitis as I have, you may have a different take. No, it may not be
that detrimental to add a couple hours of daylight to their day, but I want their rhythms to be natural. If they go broody, that's fine-I
want them to have that break from laying, give their bodies a rest. Anything I can do not to add to their reproductive issues is what I want.
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Great grandma had a flock of 40 or 50 mixed hens and roosters of varying ages and didn't care if each hen laid an egg per day. Nor did she care if a chicken or two keeled over from lack of nutrition. Today, for someone with 4 or 5 birds laying an health are more critical to the chickens owners.
Yep, my grandfather had a farm most of his life and the approach to the chickens was a practical approach like most real farmers have, not like the backyard flock owner has. He didn't particularly freak out if a bird was found dead-he threw it to the hogs. You couldn't breathe in the chicken house due to the high ammonia levels. It was a different approach than I have, certainly. Mine are pets. I get attached. It's just my nature, I suppose. I want my birds healthy and as comfortable as possible in return for what they give me.
The extra lighting is really a different issue than the OP's question about them needing a nightlight, though. As I said, they don't need one, but I like them to have a minimal amount of light to see by and I like to have it for us.