AnneDrum
Chirping
Hi everyone.
I have 16 chickens. 4 roosters and 12 hens, 8 months old.
I am getting between 2-5 eggs per day from the girls and on very few occassions, 6 or 7 eggs. I feel this is too low. If they lay a minimum of 3 eggs per week per hen, I should be getting at least 5 eggs a day. such lovely eggs though with bright orange yolks!
I feed them soaked red sorghum (70%), barley (20%) and oats (10%) twice a day. There is usually some left after they eat so I know it is enough at a time. The rest of the day they pasture on green lucerne and scratch around for bugs and worms etc. I occassionally feed them some of their own crushed egg shells and gave them a bit of bone meal too. Occassionally add DE too.
Recently the 4th rooster matured (he was a late bloomer) and has been harrassing the poor hens so we separated him since we noticed a drop in egg production because of him. So currently there are 3 active roosters in with the 12 hens which I suspect is too many, but the hens don't seem too distressed by the three of them (unless I am missing it because I am still learning).
I don't feed them any corn (yet) because I can't currently source non-GMO corn where I live.
I am worried though that they are lacking somthing in their diet.
Some of the roosters' combs are a bit faded and have dark spots, but it's been like that for a long time without them displaying any signs of illness. All chickens look healthy, no mites etc.
They have plenty egg boxes above eye sight, and always have access to water and shelter.
Any advice as to how I can get more egg production? Too many Roo's? Too little food variety? Supplementation? Those combs an issue? Should I rather not soak/ferment the grain?
Perhaps I am doing something wrong.
Thanks in advance for any help!
I have 16 chickens. 4 roosters and 12 hens, 8 months old.
I am getting between 2-5 eggs per day from the girls and on very few occassions, 6 or 7 eggs. I feel this is too low. If they lay a minimum of 3 eggs per week per hen, I should be getting at least 5 eggs a day. such lovely eggs though with bright orange yolks!
I feed them soaked red sorghum (70%), barley (20%) and oats (10%) twice a day. There is usually some left after they eat so I know it is enough at a time. The rest of the day they pasture on green lucerne and scratch around for bugs and worms etc. I occassionally feed them some of their own crushed egg shells and gave them a bit of bone meal too. Occassionally add DE too.
Recently the 4th rooster matured (he was a late bloomer) and has been harrassing the poor hens so we separated him since we noticed a drop in egg production because of him. So currently there are 3 active roosters in with the 12 hens which I suspect is too many, but the hens don't seem too distressed by the three of them (unless I am missing it because I am still learning).
I don't feed them any corn (yet) because I can't currently source non-GMO corn where I live.
I am worried though that they are lacking somthing in their diet.
Some of the roosters' combs are a bit faded and have dark spots, but it's been like that for a long time without them displaying any signs of illness. All chickens look healthy, no mites etc.
They have plenty egg boxes above eye sight, and always have access to water and shelter.
Any advice as to how I can get more egg production? Too many Roo's? Too little food variety? Supplementation? Those combs an issue? Should I rather not soak/ferment the grain?
Perhaps I am doing something wrong.
Thanks in advance for any help!