Large variance in egg laying behavior and quality, anything else we can do to help her?

Some people over dry or microwave them-I just wait for them to dry
I assumed they had to be baked or boiled or microwaved, heated in some way; I don't know where I got that impression. If letting them air dry is all one needs to do that is obviously so much easier. Is there a benefit or some bacterial reason why folks heat dry them vs. air drying?
 
If letting them air dry is all one needs to do that is obviously so much easier. Is there a benefit or some bacterial reason why folks heat dry them vs. air drying?
I don’t know honestly. I am sure there is some logic but I have never had an issue air-drying them. I did have issues accidentally toasting them though so I stopped baking them. I don’t own a microwave to try that method.
 
I assumed they had to be baked or boiled or microwaved, heated in some way; I don't know where I got that impression. If letting them air dry is all one needs to do that is obviously so much easier. Is there a benefit or some bacterial reason why folks heat dry them vs. air drying?
My guess is the main concern is bacterial, though I don't know of any evidence that proves that you should (or proves that you don't need to) process the eggshell in some fashion to make it "safe."

The way I handle it is I collect shells on an oven safe tray, then on days when I'm baking something I put it in during preheat cycle. The oven's already on so might as well use it, and the heat bakes off any sticky residue and makes the shells crunchy so they're easier to crush.
 
I soak them in water a couple of times to rinse off any yolk residue. I need to do this as someone at Church brings us about 3-5 dz shells every Sunday. As they are wet, I will place them in the sun to dry. If I'm in a hurry and need shells, into the dehydrator they go.
 
I soak them in water a couple of times to rinse off any yolk residue. I need to do this as someone at Church brings us about 3-5 dz shells every Sunday. As they are wet, I will place them in the sun to dry. If I'm in a hurry and need shells, into the dehydrator they go.
I no longer soak and bake, as there's just a little egg white on mine, but if there were yolk, I would do this too.

I like the idea of a dehydrator! Baking in the microwave - phew! 🤢
 
You already got the best advice, but wanted to chime in with my (limited) experience. My Golden Comet, which I'm pretty sure is just a rebrand of the Cinnamon Queen, also gorged herself on oyster shell. Her eggs were so hard I had to buy a special tool to crack them! I ended up transitioning them to a higher protein layer feed once everyone was laying. That seemed to satiate her need for tons of oyster shell.
 
You already got the best advice, but wanted to chime in with my (limited) experience. My Golden Comet, which I'm pretty sure is just a rebrand of the Cinnamon Queen, also gorged herself on oyster shell. Her eggs were so hard I had to buy a special tool to crack them! I ended up transitioning them to a higher protein layer feed once everyone was laying. That seemed to satiate her need for tons of oyster shell.
Good point on the protein. I recently read somewhere on this site (can't recall where) to feed meat twice a week, which I just started doing, so hopefully this will help. There just currently aren't enough bugs around here as we need more rain and everything seems to go into hiding during triple digit heat.
 

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