OMG! I will have to show this to my husband who thinks I am nuts for marking my calendar who laid an egg that day so I can keep a tally! Maybe he won't think I'm so bad now! Love what your doing!I will neither confirm nor deny engaging in this activity...All I can tell you, is that, given the choice between a nest with 1 existing eggolf ball or many (2 or more) existing "eggs", my leghorn chooses the more empty nest. My wyandotte prefers the left nest box, and my easter eggers do not have a preference.
So... when I come to collect, and I find a white egg in with a brown, blue or green egg and the gold ball...and the other nest box is empty, I know who laid first. And this quite obviously falls under the "too much time on my hands" category, but I am also tracking laying schedules in a spreadsheet, so... between that and the distribution of eggs in the nestboxes, I have a fairly accurate picture of these hens' laying cycles.
So, in this chart, I've turned on Zoe's and Inara's symbols so you can see their laying cycles more clearly amidst everyone else's... and you can definitely see that there's a pattern to a hen's laying schedule... Zoe's brown dots indicate that I should expect an egg from her today around 4pm... and then, tomorrow, she will take a break. Inara's pink squares indicate that I might not see an egg from her today. I don't seem to get an egg from her if she laid after 12pm the day before. But, it was close... so, there's still a chance... if I do, she's off tomorrow, if not, I'll get one from her before 8am tomorrow.
Obviously, if I had more than 10 hens, this kind of tracking would be ridiculous and totally impractical. But, for the first time, small flock owner (like me,), it's been extremely educational.![]()