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Can take up to 3 months. Doesn't always. Usually the middle of the molt is the worst (when they are starting to grow the feathers in). That's my experience anywaySo glad to know this is just part of the process! Ugh. So I read that moulting takes about 3 months. Is that 3 months of miserable or does that generally taper off?
Put our big old Buff Sussex in with Miss Moulter. She could keep anything warm. Now I have to get up at day break to make sure they got along!
My girls are visible to the whole neighbourhood (we get heaps of people walking past our yard with their kids to show them the chickens), so if this is what moulting is gonna be like I think I'll have to get a sign up when it happens so they don't call the council and report us for keeping diseased birds LOL.
Maybe something like:
"Please don't laugh at the moulting chickens - everyone has a bad hair day now and then"
So glad to know this is just part of the process! Ugh. So I read that moulting takes about 3 months. Is that 3 months of miserable or does that generally taper off?
Put our big old Buff Sussex in with Miss Moulter. She could keep anything warm. Now I have to get up at day break to make sure they got along!
Don't the better layers molt faster? I had a hen take a very long time, and started in February and still didn't finish completely until June. She was weird.. :/Mine average about 3 months. I have some breeds that molt quicker and are back to laying within 2 months. And some that take forever. (English Orps - but they have a ton of feathers to grow back in) It also depends on how hard their molt is.
Thank you!KatGold - yes, that's molting.
My buttercup is still losing feathers, so I may get a better picture.![]()
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That's the buzzard look. When I've had that happen with hens the head is the last to fill back in.