Moulting

Barry42001

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The bulk of my flock has started molting and are in various stages of undress of course egg production has dropped off the virtually nothing. How long does it take for a chicken to complete its moult and resume its egg laying
In a failed attempt to get more hens for egg production later on I tried to hatch 20 eggs of the 20 12 hatched out normally the rest did not that isn't what bothers me what bothers me is that of the 12 that hatched out seven roosters LOL
 
A molt can take anywhere from a month to 6 months for completion. Egg production will resume about a month after. Best wishes and good luck! :)
 
Egg laying always slows down during the molting. During this time, the energy they have is going towards growing out new feathers. The best thing to do for them during this time is to feed them more protein. You can mix it into some wet feed for them, as the wet feed helps them to digest to get it into their system faster. Mine are also going through a molt. Last night I boiled up a dozen eggs, and then today crushed them up including the shells. Then I mixed it in with some of the regular feed, and added some vitamin water for them. They love it!
 
Generally egg production starts back up during increasing daylight. I have had them resume as early as December, most wait until February to April. I see you are in Florida so it could be different as you don't get cold, which can affect egg laying.
 
Only 7 cockerels from 12 that hatched! That’s pretty good. One of my hatches this year was 6 cockerels and three pullets. I’ve had worse in the past. I hardly ever get a 50-50 hatch, most of mine are generally closer to 2/3 one sex and 1/3 the other. It can be either sex. Over several hatches it usually averages 50-50 but each individual hatch can be really tilted one way or the other. Your next hatch may be tilted even more toward cockerels or you may have mostly pullets. You may even get a 50-50, it happens. Until they hatch there is just no way to know what you will get.

You can have different kinds of molting, fast or slow with variations in between. That’s controlled by genetics. It’s not about how fast the feathers grow back, it’s about how fast they fall out. A fast molter can have bald spots and look really ragged. That’s what you want because they get over the molt a lot faster and can return to egg laying. With a slow molter you may not even be able to see that they are molting just by looking at them, it’s such a gradual process. Depending on the individual the molt can last for one month all the way to six.

Some hens will return to egg laying pretty soon after the molt is over regardless of time of year, day length, or whether the days are getting longer or shorter. Those things affect some hens more than others. They shut down their internal egg making factory while molting and have to work on the plumbing after the molt is over to start back up so it’s not instantaneous. Some hens will not return to laying until the days get longer and maybe warmer. If you have production breeds they are more likely to start back up after the molt is finished regardless of these other things but if you have decorative breeds they normally wait. It’s still an individual chicken thing, there are always exceptions.
 
I am new to chickens this past month and have so far had a rough start. I started with 2 pullets with plans to get 3 more. After a few days I noticed that my Australorp was sneezing with discharge. Brought her to vet and started an antibiotic. She cleared up after a few weeks and is off medication. Now my Barred Rock is showing symptoms. My problem is that they are experiencing their juvenile molt and I feel that I am stressing them more when catching and handling the Rock to administer the medication orally with syringe. We have 8 more days twice a day. Any ideas to make this easier on them?
 
I am new to chickens this past month and have so far had a rough start. I started with 2 pullets with plans to get 3 more. After a few days I noticed that my Australorp was sneezing with discharge. Brought her to vet and started an antibiotic. She cleared up after a few weeks and is off medication. Now my Barred Rock is showing symptoms. My problem is that they are experiencing their juvenile molt and I feel that I am stressing them more when catching and handling the Rock to administer the medication orally with syringe. We have 8 more days twice a day. Any ideas to make this easier on them?
Unfortunately no. Keep catching and dosing them. Many respiratory issues are deadly.
 
Generally egg production starts back up during increasing daylight. I have had them resume as early as December, most wait until February to April. I see you are in Florida so it could be different as you don't get cold, which can affect egg laying.

In the Winter Florida also has more daylight hours each day than Wisconsin does, so figure that into your calculations.
 

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