- Thread starter
- #31
tweetzone86
Songster
To all those on here who keep arguing about the supplemental lighting- please that is NOT what this post was about. Please read the OP and note that my chickens (RIR from a hatchery) are only SEVEN MONTHS OLD, so not molting age yet for starters (and yes, they're good layers of brown eggs, which is why I bought this breed). They have proper water and nutrition and 14 hours of lighting.
I don't treat my chickens like machines, for what it's worth. The only reason they don't completely free range is a) we're in a city/suburban area, and b) I've got neighbor cats who are intent on making a meal of them, or at least trying to anyway (plus hawks). They do range when we're outside, which isn't much with how cold it has been.
These birds have really been coddled a lot- held from the moment we received them, and the girls (6 and 9) love going out there and saying hi. I've sat on an overturned bucket out there just watching them digging around for worms when it was warmer. One jumped on my head and pooped on it- was originally on my shoulder.
These are pets as much as they are egg producers. But they are still agricultural animals, and since we're on one income due to my health, them paying for their feed is a help. It's not 100% necessary but it is a help. Eggs help me function, and now that I have chickens I flat out REFUSE to buy store-bought eggs ever again and contribute to that abominable factory-farm industry. My eventual goal is to raise all my milk, meat, eggs and what grains and produce I have space for and can grow in our climate zone (we are trying to find acreage to do so, but are stuck in suburbia in the meantime) so I can be rid of those industries altogether.
Thank you to all who didn't hammer me about using supplemental lighting and making helpful suggestions to help me figure out why production might have dropped. I am starting to think that it might be the snowy and rainy days we've had (New Mexico and Texas get a foot of snow, we get rain 2 hours from the Canadian border- how's that???). They don't go out when it's pouring and when there's snow on the ground, even though their door is open for them to do so, so maybe it's that overall effect that might have made a couple girls take more breaks than they have been.
Could we please stop the pro/con lighting issue? I know it's one where people can be passionate on both sides, but as for me I try to never forget that there are people on the other side of the keyboards and I try to be respectful to others even if I disagree with them. I have researched supplemental lighting- both pros and cons- quite extensively and that is how I came to my decision to go ahead and use lighting.
I don't treat my chickens like machines, for what it's worth. The only reason they don't completely free range is a) we're in a city/suburban area, and b) I've got neighbor cats who are intent on making a meal of them, or at least trying to anyway (plus hawks). They do range when we're outside, which isn't much with how cold it has been.
These birds have really been coddled a lot- held from the moment we received them, and the girls (6 and 9) love going out there and saying hi. I've sat on an overturned bucket out there just watching them digging around for worms when it was warmer. One jumped on my head and pooped on it- was originally on my shoulder.
These are pets as much as they are egg producers. But they are still agricultural animals, and since we're on one income due to my health, them paying for their feed is a help. It's not 100% necessary but it is a help. Eggs help me function, and now that I have chickens I flat out REFUSE to buy store-bought eggs ever again and contribute to that abominable factory-farm industry. My eventual goal is to raise all my milk, meat, eggs and what grains and produce I have space for and can grow in our climate zone (we are trying to find acreage to do so, but are stuck in suburbia in the meantime) so I can be rid of those industries altogether.
Thank you to all who didn't hammer me about using supplemental lighting and making helpful suggestions to help me figure out why production might have dropped. I am starting to think that it might be the snowy and rainy days we've had (New Mexico and Texas get a foot of snow, we get rain 2 hours from the Canadian border- how's that???). They don't go out when it's pouring and when there's snow on the ground, even though their door is open for them to do so, so maybe it's that overall effect that might have made a couple girls take more breaks than they have been.
Could we please stop the pro/con lighting issue? I know it's one where people can be passionate on both sides, but as for me I try to never forget that there are people on the other side of the keyboards and I try to be respectful to others even if I disagree with them. I have researched supplemental lighting- both pros and cons- quite extensively and that is how I came to my decision to go ahead and use lighting.