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YIKES! TWELVE!?!?!?!![]()
I think I'd have a heart attack!?!!!![]()
Did they all live????![]()
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YIKES! TWELVE!?!?!?!![]()
I think I'd have a heart attack!?!!!![]()
Did they all live????![]()
I wouldn't count on just 3 pups. The litter I got my golden from was a litter of 12, and what I've beem told, they usually have large litters. You can always hope, though.
A lot of people say that 14 hours of daylight are required for egg laying, but I'm getting eggs right now and we don't get up to 14 hours until May around here. If you decide to supplement, aim for 14 hours total ending around your natural evening dusk.Ok. I'm in. Officially. Hoping the Ameraucana/EE will start laying soon. THey are young pullets and better get a move on. Need large eggs for this project; pullet eggs go in the egg cartons, not the incubator. Maybe they need a little more light! ANyone know how much light and how long bfore the eggs start showing up??
A lot of people say that 14 hours of daylight are required for egg laying, but I'm getting eggs right now and we don't get up to 14 hours until May around here. If you decide to supplement, aim for 14 hours total ending around your natural evening dusk.
I haven't used any supplemental light, but my nine pullets went from an average of 1-3 eggs per day throughout the winter to 4-8 once we had 10 hours and 10 minutes of sunlight per day. (If you're interested in day length as it relates to your latitude, I wrote a bit about it on my blog one day.) Now, I know that this isn't supposed to have an effect, but I have also noticed that I seem to get more eggs during warmer weeks than cooler weeks. I'll have to actually lay the numbers out and see if there really is a correlation.
My Silver Ameraucanas laid just one egg between the two of them when they were 6 months old and then did not lay again until they were 9 months old. The EEs were better and started laying at about 5 1/2 months and laid through winter. Maybe the line of EE/Ameraucanas you have tend to lay a bit later.![]()