I'm so in trouble, falling in love with an Easter Egger

Darklingstorm

Songster
9 Years
Jan 10, 2011
633
11
131
Durant, Oklahoma
I received my newest fuzzy butts a week ago today and already one is becoming my absolute favorite. She is currently called "Lady Hawk". I so love her coloring and hoping very hard that it doesn't change when she gets her adult feathers. I have 9 older chickens and I've been able to keep a farmer's perspective as to their future. But this one little fuzzy is making it very hard to see her as a future dinner when she is done with egg laying.

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Quote:
Because after a few years they don't lay enough eggs to earn their keep.

She is cute though!

Then maybe try chickens not from hatchery stock? . . . . I've heard of and even personally known a lot of chickens who lived beyond 3 years and continued laying just as well as they did their second, sometimes even first year.


And putting the "hatchery stock" subject away, some Easter Eggers are actually known to be some pretty reliable layers, beyond the normal 3 years. Their origin breed, the Quechua can continue laying even beyond 10 years.
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Quote:
Because after a few years they don't lay enough eggs to earn their keep.

She is cute though!

Then maybe try chickens not from hatchery stock? . . . . I've heard of and even personally known a lot of chickens who lived beyond 3 years and continued laying just as well as they did their second, sometimes even first year.


And putting the "hatchery stock" subject away, some Easter Eggers are actually known to be some pretty reliable layers, beyond the normal 3 years. Their origin breed, the Quechua can continue laying even beyond 10 years.
smile.png


I was more refering to a chicken living 10+ years, after 2-3 years egg production drops. I have mostly mutts, and thats when they start slowing down, about 2 1/2 years.
 

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