Hen laying soft shelled eggs constantly!!!

You really should start some calcium now. I recommend calcium citrate with D3, and the generic Equate brand is under $9 at Walmart. That will help the soft egg problem if she has a calcium deficiency. If that does not help after 7 days dose, it could be a shell gland (oviduct) problem. The vitamin E could increase laying, but now the problem is the soft shells. Equate also sell E400 IU for $9. Generic vitamins are fine and will reduce the cost.
 
You really should start some calcium now. I recommend calcium citrate with D3, and the generic Equate brand is under $9 at Walmart. That will help the soft egg problem if she has a calcium deficiency. If that does not help after 7 days dose, it could be a shell gland (oviduct) problem. The vitamin E could increase laying, but now the problem is the soft shells. Equate also sell E400 IU for $9. Generic vitamins are fine and will reduce the cost.
Thank you, yes I'm going to buy some Calcium Citrate and D 3 today along with the vitamin E oil. Thank you again for your help.
 
Just for more info, if receiving a balanced fresh chicken feed, chickens will get plenty of vitamin E. If feed gets old, vitamin e can leech out of it. Foods high in E are sunflower kernels, crushed almonds, or peanuts.
 
Just for more info, if receiving a balanced fresh chicken feed, chickens will get plenty of vitamin E. If feed gets old, vitamin e can leech out of it. Foods high in E are sunflower kernels, crushed almonds, or peanuts.
I agree that calcium/Vitamin D should be the first option, but don't doubt my veracity. I use a quality, fresh feed- Nutrena Hearty Hen and later Nutrena All Flock and have had good success with my girls for 7 years before running into a soft shell problem. Vitamin E was an excellent solution, but it doesn't have the same track record as calcium, so I recommend it as a second option only.
 
If you know which one it is, try giving her a human calcium citrate tablet with vitamin D 3 tablet orally daily for the next 7 days. Tums or other calcium would work until you get the generic tablet. She might have a problem with her shell gland, but this will rule out a calcium deficiency.Are you using an all flock feed, not a layer feed? Layer has 4 times the amount of calcium in it than all flock. It is better to put crushed oyster shell in a separate container than feed. That way each hen takes it is she needs it.
Can I ask how you give the calcium tablet? Do you just give it whole or break it up? Never have had to do that before. Similar issue with my hen Lucy.
 

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