While my boy was hospitalized last month, there was very little interaction with the flock. Someone was here once daily to collect eggs and fill the feed and water containers.
I now have a mixed flock of egg-eaters and tree-roosters.
My flock has over 30+ hens of laying age, and lately I'm lucky to get 2-4 eggs a day. I'm actually catching then hens in the act of eating the eggs.
They're also free-range, but have always come back to the coop at night to be closed in. The blasted Brown Leghorns have taken to roosting in trees, and now the rest of my flock has begun to follow suit.
Imagine me with a handful of pebbles, yelling at trees and throwing rocks to scare them down, and then herd them back to the coop. Three nights of this has left me quite frustrated.
My run is large, but has no cover, I've closed them in, but, again, the brown leghorns figure out how to fly out and the more lean girls follow their lead. The older, more mature hens aren't capable of 8 foot high flight.
There is NO money to cover the run right now, it's not even an option. We have a small covered run, maybe 10 feet wide and 20 feet long, but I can't cram 30+ hens into that small a space.
And keeping most of them in the run all day has increased the egg eating.
So, experts, should I fatten them up and cull them and start anew (NOT what I want to do) or are there other things I can do?
Thanks in advance-
Em
I now have a mixed flock of egg-eaters and tree-roosters.
My flock has over 30+ hens of laying age, and lately I'm lucky to get 2-4 eggs a day. I'm actually catching then hens in the act of eating the eggs.
They're also free-range, but have always come back to the coop at night to be closed in. The blasted Brown Leghorns have taken to roosting in trees, and now the rest of my flock has begun to follow suit.
Imagine me with a handful of pebbles, yelling at trees and throwing rocks to scare them down, and then herd them back to the coop. Three nights of this has left me quite frustrated.
My run is large, but has no cover, I've closed them in, but, again, the brown leghorns figure out how to fly out and the more lean girls follow their lead. The older, more mature hens aren't capable of 8 foot high flight.
There is NO money to cover the run right now, it's not even an option. We have a small covered run, maybe 10 feet wide and 20 feet long, but I can't cram 30+ hens into that small a space.
And keeping most of them in the run all day has increased the egg eating.

So, experts, should I fatten them up and cull them and start anew (NOT what I want to do) or are there other things I can do?
Thanks in advance-
Em