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Help! My Chickens have not laid eggs in several Months~

My chickens started laying in the fall of their first year and continued throughout the winter even though some went through a heavier molt than I anticipated.

This year, most all went through a very heavy molt in the late fall/early winter and stopped laying at that point. We started getting an egg or two a day (I only have 7 hens) during the polar vortex, (great timing, girls :lol:). I realized something yesterday that I hadn't noticed before. When the girls stopped laying, they also stopped squatting when I reached down to pet them or pick them up; they tried to run away instead. Last week I noticed they were squatting again when I tried to pick them up. I interpret this as a signal to the rooster (if I had a rooster) that they are back in business again.

Which begs another question. When hens stop laying do roosters become less interested in mating?
 
I interpret this as a signal to the rooster (if I had a rooster) that they are back in business again.

Which begs another question. When hens stop laying do roosters become less interested in mating?
Yep.
and yep...a good cockbird will not mount a bird that is not in lay.
 
I may sound redundant here because you have already received excellent advice.
As for feeding, it isn't rocket science and one doesn't have to be a poultry nutritionist unless they decide to try and make their own feed or insist on adding a lot of supplements.
Protein and calcium percentages are the only things that vary by much in chicken feed. We go by general names and what is typically in the feed. Layer is normally about 16% protein and 4% calcium. All other feeds (starter/grower/finisher/all flock etc.) will vary from 13% to 28% protein and are all about 1% calcium.
That's because only chickens actively building egg shells can make use of that high calcium content.
Species and stage of life dictates the protein percentage needed.
In case one is confused about what birds should be fed layer feed, it is in the name. It is for layers - only. If a female chicken isn't laying eggs, she is a hens NOT a layer. Roosters and young birds aren't layers either.
Since none of your birds have been laying for months, they shouldn't be eating layer feed till laying resumes.
Instead of going to a forum, all one has to do is read the feeding instructions on the back of the feed bag and on the guaranteed analysis tag. It is right there when you go to the feed store. It will tell you what animals it is intended to feed and has been printed on every bag in modern times. As knowledgeable as folks here are, no one knows more about what is in that specific bag of feed and what animals it was formulated to feed than the manufacturer of that feed.

Sweet Feed is normally a horse feed. The bag you posted a picture of is All Stock Sweet Feed (not All Flock). That means horses, cows, sheep and goats (potentially llamas, alpacas, etc.) Definitely not for poultry. That information is printed on the bag.
All flock feed is nutritionally complete for poultry.
Sweet feed in not a complete feed for stock as they also require grazing/forage as well. And for everything but sheep, a copper supplement is also needed.

Corn is the main ingredient in about 90% of the chicken feed sold in the US. If corn was a magic food that causes chickens to lay, they would already be laying. The person that told you to add corn to the diet to stimulate laying knows nothing about poultry nutrition or egg production. Don't seek animal husbandry advice from them again.
Adding lots of things like vegetables and grain will lower the crude protein percentage of the total intake and essential amino acids even more so.

Chickens (and all animals) need to be photo-stimulated to produce eggs/offspring. However, that doesn't mean light 24/7. All animals also need a daily dark period. It is the gradual increase of day length that stimulates the gonads to induce ovulation. 24/7 light just screws them up.
24/7 light is how prisoner of war soldiers are tortured.
Add to that a small cell, that's enough stress to prevent ovulation.

As for the suggestion of cat food, again it is necessary to read the label. My wife has several cans of cat food in the pantry to add to the cat's dry food as a treat. The canned food is only 12% crude protein so that will lower the overall protein - not increase it.

And one shouldn't mix things in a complete chicken feed - especially not oyster shell. It must be in a separate container. Doing so will force them to over consume calcium if they want to eat.
 
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@beaches4me, great job coming to BYC for advice on this issue. I agree diet is likely the primary cause for the cessation in laying in your young birds. I can tell you want to do right by them, so I hope you do take the advice to provide a quality poultry feed only. I would also not add any supplemental light. They will start laying again when their bodies are healthy and rested enough to do so.

You shared a brief description of your coop, but not the dimensions. The more square feet per bird the better, but another important factor is ventilation. Is the coop well ventilated? Also, stressed birds are more prone to illness and parasites. How does their poop look, and could you submit a sample to a local vet for a fecal float test?
 
Hello everyone! I know that molting and often the winter time can hinder the laying of chickens but this has been going since the end of October or before that they quit laying. I have many different types of breeds, one or two roosters possibly, I think one at least, the rest, about 30 maybe, all hens, almost a year old. We got them all last spring, had been laying at the end of summer and then quit. I saw them molting and figured, OK, makes sense, plus we had a lot of roosters that some of y'all helped me figure out we had that we took out of the mix. It had gotten cold too, so I figured and the time change. But I figured they would have started laying again by now.

We put a light in they're laying nesting area and leave it on 24/7; put it in there almost a week ago but that still hasn't seemed to help. We feed them cracked corn and house scraps (egg shells, bread, veggies etc.) We were feeding them laying mash, but I had read on here or on Facebook backyard page/group that a woman said feeding them cracked or whole corn and a light had her chickens laying again in a week or less. I tried that and still nothing.

Any suggestions or help? Any and all would be greatly appreciated!!!
DON'T leave lights on 24/7! I think they might have a hard time sleeping. Good luck!
 

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