SamLockwood
Songster
- Sep 29, 2022
- 464
- 942
- 166
First and foremost I would guess that selective breeding is a factor: they breed out a lot of the chicken's natural instincts. When I was looking for hatcheries last year, I discovered the majority don't really sell to the general public and the breeds are just known by code-numbers.
Secondly, those "poor living conditions" are the only thing those commercial egg-layers ever knew. As far as they know life is just a tiny little cage and I doubt it's as stressful as if you were to take the average pampered backyard chicken and suddenly put them into a small nesting box 24/7. I would bet if I tried to do that with my birds that have free ranged since six weeks old they'd go insane within an hour.
Third, they've got down to a science on how to feed, watering, light and climate control those factory farms to maximize egg-laying.
Secondly, those "poor living conditions" are the only thing those commercial egg-layers ever knew. As far as they know life is just a tiny little cage and I doubt it's as stressful as if you were to take the average pampered backyard chicken and suddenly put them into a small nesting box 24/7. I would bet if I tried to do that with my birds that have free ranged since six weeks old they'd go insane within an hour.
Third, they've got down to a science on how to feed, watering, light and climate control those factory farms to maximize egg-laying.