Feather loss

mrkep

Songster
12 Years
Joined
Mar 10, 2010
Messages
106
Reaction score
12
Points
194
Location
Richwood , Ohio
My 9 Buckeyes, 2 yrs old, are losing lots of feathers. The feathers are all the fliffy, small ones , looks like from the breast & belly area. No one hen has a noticible bald spot. The weather here has been hot, 90-95, for weeks and is predicted to be that way for a while. I have been feeding extra protein and make sure they always have fresh, cold water. So is this because of heat or an early molt? They all seem healthy, have not lost weight, and are eating well. Anything to be concerned about?
mrkep
 
I say they are molting too, has the egg laying slowed down?
, alot of times hens will lay a lot less or even stop laying during the molt.
 
Yes, the egg layig has slowed down. As 2 yr old hens, they have already slowed from 8-10 eggs / day to 3-5. Now to 1 or 2 eggs every other day.
 
I would'nt worry myself, but with the age of the hens ,maybe it's time to add a few fresh feathers to the the coop, thats if you LOVE the eggs ,as I do, I'm new to BYC, but have been a chicken raiser for 20 yrs, and as the hens get older ,so do there production, so every other year I add a few new feathers to make up for the older hens, and I don;t cut the ones that stop laying,I LET THEM LIVE,as long as they won't,they feed me for years , so i feed them for years!!
droolin.gif
but you can do as you please.
 
I agree about keeping them, I got into this to have help with composting garden leftovers and as another retirement project. The eggs are a great benefit but if they produce only 6 each week, we will eat that many. I will add to the flock next spring, let this group go thru the winter , hopefully they will all make it. They are not real people-friendly birds, we would like to try a breed that would be more inclined to be lap chickens.
mrkep
 
If you're looking for lap hens, I would suggest Barred Plymouth Rocks, or Golden Buffs,or Red Stars, with my experience with these breeds, i have found these to be loving with great personalitys,the real main key is to get them as young as possible, an handle them everyday as long as you can.we have a Black Barnavale hen, that will ride on our shoulder, as long as we will let her, but we hatched her under a duck,we keep her in a large bird cage, in the house for a whole winter tho.The more you handle them, the better the chance of getting your lap chicken.
 
They could be going broody. Happened to me. Egg count dropped off and I noticed soft feathers mostly in the nests but around the run too. Next thing, I had hens go broody on me.
 
One is sitting on an empty nest. Well, I just went out and pushed her off the nest and blocked them so she's up on the roost now. I'm trying to break her w/ out putting her in a cage. I just can't do that to her. I'll try that for a few nights and if that doesn't work, I'll let her be broody.

I was able to break the other hen of being broody last week. She was less persistent and easier to break. Pushing her off the nest and blocking them worked.

And then I also have a BO who is 20 months old and is clearly molting. I've collected about 12-14 large wing and tail feathers and she's losing feathers from all over, larger and smaller and tiny downy feathers. Clearly a molt.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom