Greetings from central Virginia

feltingfrenzy

Chirping
7 Years
Aug 6, 2012
24
1
92
Greetings to all,

Been raising guinea fowl for many years, and decided to switch to chickens. The guineas have been re-homed, the coop is clean, and the brooder is ready for an August 14th shipment of Barred Rocks and Silver Laced Wyandottes chicks.

I chose these two breeds because they are a dual breed, good layers year round (my main focus is eggs for consumption) and to be honest: I liked their looks.

I'm going to jump right in with a question. Because both breeds lay during cold weather, should I still supplement the light in the coop for 15 hours; or, do they not need that? If they do need it, do I begin the extra light at their 5-6 month age (so they don't begin laying too young)?

Thanks, and looking forward to being part of the backyard chicken community,

Nan
 
Welcome from the Northern Neck of Virginia
frow.gif
 
Greetings from Kansas and
welcome-byc.gif
! Sorry that I can't help you with your question. You might post it over on the Chicken Behavior and Egg Laying forum - you should get plenty of good info there. Best of luck to you!
 
Welcome from Indiana!
frow.gif

This first year you shouldn't need any supplemental light for sure. Does your coop have windows? Being able to take advantage of natural light helps a lot IMO. My original girls are three years old, and other than molting times (which can last several weeks), have laid well through the winter months w/out supplemental light (but my coop has windows). I'm still getting 4-5 eggs a week from them now, so am interested to see how they'll do THIS winter outside of the molting window...
 
Last edited:
Hello and welcome to BYC
frow.gif
My hens continued laying well through winter, some even started laying mid-winter, but they are a bunch of mixed breeds.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom