- Oct 20, 2014
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Hello all! First off I want to thank you all in advance for all of the great knowledge you share here! A bit about us, first time having chickens, we have 13 birds of varying breeds. We have 5 hylines that we got first. If I knew then what I know now I wouldn't have chosen them. I am stressed about when the two year mark comes and they stop laying!!! I don't know if I could eat them! We are looking at raising meat birds in the spring and I will be sure not to name those ones! We have an ancient welsummer that came with the coop (that my grandfather built for my aunt), a red rock, barred rock, Plymouth Rock, a splash Orpington, black maran and 2 americunas (I am spelling that wrong!) all are now laying except the Plymouth Rock and the americunas. Our girls free range over the 5 acres, and they have a very large penned area in a cedar grove with the biggest, most amazing rotten stump that holds enough bugs to keep them happy for hours a day. Thanks again for sharing all of your experiences! I don't have any pressing questions at the moment except, maybe how you all have dealt with the hylines when they stop laying. How long do they live? I find they are the most social and loving of our birds

) and the weather conditions. They generally live 4 years and stop laying after 2 or 3, although there are plenty of variations - our Trotsky is now 4.5 years old and still laying. Feathers died at age 2 because it was very aggressive and didn't like to eat its veggies.
and Welcome To BYC! X3 The production breeds like the various Hyline strains are bred to produce a lot of eggs in a short period of time, usually the commercial operations replace them around 2.5 years since they don't want to keep them through the second molt. They do, like all hens go into molt and will quit laying during that time, if you keep them after that they will start laying again, just less than they used to... Most of the commercial hybrids do seem to have a shorter life span and lot more reproductive problems which tend to lead to early deaths, some of them do live good long lives though.
