OK, so here is what I have. 4 older hens, 2 White leghorns, and 2 red star's. 1 18 week old pullet who runs and hides, cause they all pick on her.
I have had upwards of 3-4 eggs per day (and even one glorious 5 egg day), but recently it is down to only getting 2. I was wondering why their production was down, then last night as I was closing them up in the coop at dusk I caught them cannibalizing a shell-less egg. tried to stop them by grabbing it but they went feeding frenzy and I couldn't stop the yolk from hitting the bedding.
So I'm now assuming that all 4 older hens are fully ingrained in eating their own eggs. Now I'm a farm boy. grew up eating frog legs, deer and morels. no problem butchering hens and all, but I don't want to go that route if I don't have too. (I think my ultimate solution will be a whole new flock generation next year. but for now, I want to CURE them of the errors in their ways. Don't want to cull if I don't have to.
So I'm going to start with the basics. Sunday I'm going to the farm store (working all day today, cant get there) and get ceramic eggs and oyster shell, I'll let them eat all the oyster shell they want and replace my Titleist eggs with realistic ceramic ones (possible they are able to tell the difference) also no more egg shells fed back to them, (possibly where this all began, my fault). Then I'm going to start letting them out in the morning to free graze, (6' tall privacy fenced suburban back yard with cinder blocks over the rabbit holes, and trim-winged chickenses, so they cant escape) and put them up at night to roost. I'm hoping that this will let them get less stress from begin caged all day, and hopefully alleviate the desire to eat eggs.
I'm curious about other helpful options to assist with this problem.
- does the mustard in the egg trick really work, I can try this, but I'd be interested to know if it really works, I heard pepper doesn't because it does not affect their taste buds
- is it possible that trimming beaks could help stop this, if so how, ( & I don't think It's cruel, screw PETA, I take good care of my animals)
- are there any other tricks that could help
I have had upwards of 3-4 eggs per day (and even one glorious 5 egg day), but recently it is down to only getting 2. I was wondering why their production was down, then last night as I was closing them up in the coop at dusk I caught them cannibalizing a shell-less egg. tried to stop them by grabbing it but they went feeding frenzy and I couldn't stop the yolk from hitting the bedding.
So I'm now assuming that all 4 older hens are fully ingrained in eating their own eggs. Now I'm a farm boy. grew up eating frog legs, deer and morels. no problem butchering hens and all, but I don't want to go that route if I don't have too. (I think my ultimate solution will be a whole new flock generation next year. but for now, I want to CURE them of the errors in their ways. Don't want to cull if I don't have to.
So I'm going to start with the basics. Sunday I'm going to the farm store (working all day today, cant get there) and get ceramic eggs and oyster shell, I'll let them eat all the oyster shell they want and replace my Titleist eggs with realistic ceramic ones (possible they are able to tell the difference) also no more egg shells fed back to them, (possibly where this all began, my fault). Then I'm going to start letting them out in the morning to free graze, (6' tall privacy fenced suburban back yard with cinder blocks over the rabbit holes, and trim-winged chickenses, so they cant escape) and put them up at night to roost. I'm hoping that this will let them get less stress from begin caged all day, and hopefully alleviate the desire to eat eggs.
I'm curious about other helpful options to assist with this problem.
- does the mustard in the egg trick really work, I can try this, but I'd be interested to know if it really works, I heard pepper doesn't because it does not affect their taste buds
- is it possible that trimming beaks could help stop this, if so how, ( & I don't think It's cruel, screw PETA, I take good care of my animals)
- are there any other tricks that could help