First-time raising chickens (layers) - ?? on egg decrease in Winter

shutterbabe

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We live in SW New Hampshire where the night time temps have been dipping below freezing for about 10 days now. We have 7 pullets - 1 Rhode Island Red, 2 Barred Rock, 2 Buff Orpington, and 2 Araucanas. My Rhode Island Red began laying 1 egg every 1-2 days about 4 weeks ago and one other pullet began laying shortly there after but only 1 egg every 3-4 days. Two weeks ago I installed a heat lamp for them, and added a second this past weekend. However for the past 2 1/2 weeks, we've only gotten 1 egg! Except for one variety (I can't recall now which) whose egg production will drop slightly in the Winter unless she receives artificial heat, they're all hearty varieties that should continue laying in the winter with enough light (and they have that). At least that's what I read........ Were all the books and the breed information I found online wrong?

They eat organic egg layer pellets as their main food and get cracked corn, organic oats, veggie and bread scraps as treats. They always have fresh water & food. The 7 pullets live in a very solid tractor (but I built it too heavy so now it's a coop - it's up on blocks - there's poultry netting stapled to the bottom too, and I stuff fresh straw under so their poop falls out into the straw & they're not walking in it) which is 3.5 ft x 8 ft with a 4ft x 8 ft extension and they have a 12 ft x 4 ft (4 ft tall too) run so they have enough room. The run has straw in it too and I change it once/2-3 weeks. Their run isn't muddy or smelly and full of poop. They appear happy & healthy.

While we LOVE them, we also LOVE their eggs
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so any help is MUCH appreciated!!!! :o) THANK YOU!!
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Your breeds are supposedly good layers thru wintertime. I have some of the same and even though I am coming upon my first winter w/ chickens, I have heard that these breeds should be fine. They are cold hardy and only need more light (not more heat) to keep up production. Yours should do very well, so I've heard.

By the way...
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We have less than 11 hours of daylight here in S Carolina, and our 8 hens have not slacked off on bit.. We have 5 amberlinks, 2 BO, and 1 Wyn. and we are still get over 6 eggs every day. The same average we have been getting since Aug.
 
Everyone who said just wait and let them get back on track, you were right!! I should have waiting another day LOL. Patience is a virtue, just not one of mine.
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2 eggs in 2 days.
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Thank you everyone!!
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