Well, we have now had our Hens for 1 month. It's been a lot of fun but I'm not going to lie also very frustrating.
Issues outstanding.
Orpingtons will not roost on their own. they always require me to come in and shoo them onto the ramp, only then they will go up to the bar and roost.
This is annoying obviously but is now becoming an even bigger problem, because they now expect me to come and put them to bed everynight, you can see them waiting for me at the gate to their run come dusk. last night I couldn't put them to bed due to other commitments and guess what. I found them outside the coop, in their run, trying to sleep on the floor well after dark. So they seemingly expect me to come and put them to bed now! but if I dont do that they wont go on their roost. Very frustrating and very laborious.
Second thing, they wont use their dust bath. It's a good size, its dry, it has DE and sand and dry soil in it. Looks great!. Nah they would rather roll about in their own poo and mud. Again, really frustrating.
No sign of any egg behaviour from either the Orps or the Sussex. The sussex is looking like a proper hen now and must be 24 weeks old+. None of them laying.
And when they do, I'm willing to bet they don't lay in their nesting boxes. I've popped a few fake eggs in the nesting boxes but I've never seen them so much as glance in the nesting boxes. They dig holes in the coop sandust and sometimes lie there, willing to bet they lay their eggs there...
So after a month of me trying everything, moving things around, changing layouts, really trying my hardest:
Still wont roost
Wont dust bath
Wont lay / not even looking at nesting boxes / never been in them.
To be honest I wont be buying from that breeder again. While they are very nice looking and healthy hens, they just don't know how to be hens if that makes sense. They have clearly never had access to a roost bar before coming to me, she said they had never even been outside even and they are really really timid still. As a family we interact with them at least 10 times a day, giving them tid bits and meal worms. They are getting a little better but all still very very timid.