I have some breeds that don't lay a lot of eggs. I was wondering, is there anything I could add to their diet that would encourage their bodies to lay more?
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My chickens were laying an average of 1 egg every 2 weeks this winter and so I tried putting a light in the coop to give them some more light because I heard that chickens need at least 16 hours of light to lay an egg. I don't know if there is anything you can use food-wise to increase egg production.
Here's a good article on increasing production!
https://www.backyardchickens.com/a/what-affects-egglaying-and-how-to-increase-egg-production
Take the sweaters off them, they are ticked off at you..lol!I have some breeds that don't lay a lot of eggs. I was wondering, is there anything I could add to their diet that would encourage their bodies to lay more?
I have a lot of different breeds. I have a large coop, they are all free range, they have heated waters in the winter so it's always liquid. I feed them non GMO grain that we get from a local farmer.Take the sweaters off them, they are ticked off at you..lol!
Light in winter can help, especially if it's applied correctly, but not always.
That 'article' says to add scratch for more protein...that's not accurate, most scratch mixes are significantly lower in protein than a balanced chicken ration..
You need to look at all foods given and their protein contents to balance overall nutrients.
Seriously if you want to figure it out, here are some things to investigate:
What exactly are you feeding?
What breeds, and their ages, do you have?
How big is your coop (feet by feet) and how many birds total?
How do you keep their water liquid?
Do they free range?
Quote: Free ranging...they could be laying out in range area.
Do you know the protein percentage of the feed you are providing?
Is it just grain or is there a premix added to grain for other nutrients