I was reading this article from the University of Nebraska about light and egg laying and this part seems to contradict itself.
"When chicks are hatched from April to July, natural lighting patterns are sufficient, and chicks will gradually develop into pullets and lay eggs. If artificial light is needed to stimulate egg production, begin by exposing pullets to 8-10 hours of light per day."
Here in Missouri if a chick is born in April it starts out with almost 13 hours of natural daylight and by the time it's 2 months old it gets over 14 hours of daylight.
My chickens were born on August 16th and have had at least 14 hours of light a day (added in the morning automagicly). Anyone else adding light to their coop and run in the morning? My hope is to have some eggs by January so I don't have to mooch off my neighbor any more...
JT
"When chicks are hatched from April to July, natural lighting patterns are sufficient, and chicks will gradually develop into pullets and lay eggs. If artificial light is needed to stimulate egg production, begin by exposing pullets to 8-10 hours of light per day."
Here in Missouri if a chick is born in April it starts out with almost 13 hours of natural daylight and by the time it's 2 months old it gets over 14 hours of daylight.
My chickens were born on August 16th and have had at least 14 hours of light a day (added in the morning automagicly). Anyone else adding light to their coop and run in the morning? My hope is to have some eggs by January so I don't have to mooch off my neighbor any more...
JT