Do you light the coop to continue egg laying in winter?

kathyinmo

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16 Years
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My Coop
My Coop
I read that chickens need 16 hours of light to continue laying. So that means that they quit laying, or slow down??? in the winter months? My chickens are 16 weeks old, and should start laying soon. Does this mean they may not start to lay due to the decreased daylight. I mean, isn't their first year their "best" year laying? I am really looking forward to fresh eggs!
 
They need 14 hours light. Whether they stop laying or slow down in the wintertime depends on the breed and the individual chicken. Mine laid all thru their first winter last year and I don't add light.
 
My first year RIR and BRs laid steadily all through last winter without any additional light.
 
I added some light the first year. Will never do it again. I've had six hatchery girls die from internal laying and I have two more who are suffering from it now and will probably die. Artificial lighting pushes their bodies to keep on when they'd naturally slow down or take a break. If you have a commercial egg business, that's what you'd do, but I really believe that for backyard flocks, it's best to allow their natural rhythms to prevail.

Unfortunately, hatchery stock, especially the most common hatchery layer breeds, are bred to keep on laying no matter what. My girls didnt even break for their molts, so that molting period was a long, drawn out one for many of them. If they stop laying, their bodies can use the protein, vitamins and minerals to grow back their feathers faster.
 
Kind of on-topic a little, trying not to hyjack, but my pullets are due to START laying in November... how does that work since there is so little light and all? Will they just not lay at all till spring?
 
I was thinking of putting some solar lights inside the coop, do you think that would have any adverse health risks? They're just LED lights, I was thinking it would keep them a little more calm in the winter since they're used to more light right now.
 
Quote:
I do have a single solar LED light above one of the clear roof panels. I don't know if that is enough light to affect their laying. It's somewat like moonlight.
 

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