My friend's chickens aren't laying! HELP!

The Chicken Fan

Chirping
May 26, 2015
159
7
66
Oregon
My neighbors have 20 chickens that I am taking care of for them. The previous owners said they were laying when they got them. Well it's been 3-4 weeks now and only 5 of them have started laying again! How long do chickens take to get used to their new surroundings and start laying again? My neighbors are becoming pretty frustrated that they're not laying by now. Please help!
 
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It may take them a while, especially if they are young or the change was significant. What breed are they? What age are they? What are they being fed? How are they being housed?

I hope I can help. Best of luck!
smile.png
 
They're are Buff Orpingtons, Easter Eggers, a Barred Rock, Australorps, and some others but I don't know the breed of them.

The Buff Orpingtons are 2 years old past their prime for sure but 3 or 4 out of 8 are laying. The others not sure. I'm guessing a year.

They're being fed layer feed not sure what brand. I just know it has a lot of corn in it. Do you need to know the brand?

They're being housed in a nice coop with plenty of roosts and nesting boxes. Their yard is pretty big, but my neighbors are planning on extending it even more soon.

Hope this helps. Thanks
 
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It could just be taking a while. I've hear of some people going months with very few eggs.

You could try feeding them scrambled eggs and oyster shell to offer more calcium, vitamins and protein. Getting them some meal worms may excite them into wanting to lay. Make sure they are getting enough lighting (14 hours) each day. Also, chickens that are stressed sometimes enter a molt and they don't lay while molting.
 
If these are the chickens I am thinking of - here's my thoughts, For you only, not for the owner :).

1. The Orpingtons are close to too old to lay. Chickens are born with the exact number of eggs they will ever lay. They do not produce ova like humans or mammals. Once they lay all the eggs they were born with, that's it. They also had leg scaly mites which bother them into a frenzy so they don't lay. I suggested vaseline or cooking oil soak from the toes to the feather start on the legs. The rooster had them too, I showed them how to check for mites and dust for that also since bugs = less eggs,

2. The chickens that came to live with them from yours truly range in age from 6 months to 18 mos. Since they came from a large farm, it is difficult to know exactly which hens are laying at any given time. However, since some of the chickens lay colored eggs, it is easier to tell. Also, they came from free-ranging to a pen, which also makes a little change to their routine.

3. Any move will stress them out until they get settled. In this case, those folks mix scratch in with the feed. Scratch is like ice cream to chickens, although in the winter it helps them build heat in their bodies. I use scratch to greet my girls and to put them to bed at night. I use dried mealworms to train them to come when I shake the can. Now the corn fools them. So, if they do not have free supply of good laying feed, (that is, they run out of food often) they again may not lay as well.

4. Bedding. The chickens they received from me bed in pine shavings and so I have never used cedar shavings with them. The cedar could have also affected their "happiness to lay"

5. Weather. This summer has been unusually warm on the Coast. My hens are down on production as well, and I lost two to being egg-bound. Yesterday I went out to check them and one of the hens had a broken shell protruding from her hind end. She was distressed trying to remove it herself. Once I did, she was happy and went about her business. I check my flock at least twice a day - I collect eggs about 1 pm daily. Most have laid by then. If the eggs are dirty (which they actually stay pretty clean on pine shavings - until the rainy season) - I wash them with warm water. I immediately refrigerate them, because I have roosters, and if an egg is fertile, the cold temp (42 degrees) keeps them fresh eggs, not embryos. I also have an egg handlers license.

6. First Aid kit - Veterycin VF is the stuff I was telling you about. I also have Adams Flea Shampoo that I put in a squirt bottle, watered down that I squirt on the girls butts periodically just to make sure if they have mites, the mites are killed. Mites primarily lie in hay.

7. Be careful giving your girls fresh cut grass or green hay - they eat it and it gets stuck in their crop and the crop can get impacted. You will be able to tell when this happens - the crop gets distended and really hard, and their breath smells retched. Just gross. I have lost two and saved one with this issue. Have plain yogurt on hand - its good for them, healthy or ill, and they love it.

Keep my card and call me anytime!

Kat
 
If these are the chickens I am thinking of - here's my thoughts, For you only, not for the owner :).

1. The Orpingtons are close to too old to lay. Chickens are born with the exact number of eggs they will ever lay. They do not produce ova like humans or mammals. Once they lay all the eggs they were born with, that's it. They also had leg scaly mites which bother them into a frenzy so they don't lay. I suggested vaseline or cooking oil soak from the toes to the feather start on the legs. The rooster had them too, I showed them how to check for mites and dust for that also since bugs = less eggs,

2. The chickens that came to live with them from yours truly range in age from 6 months to 18 mos. Since they came from a large farm, it is difficult to know exactly which hens are laying at any given time. However, since some of the chickens lay colored eggs, it is easier to tell. Also, they came from free-ranging to a pen, which also makes a little change to their routine.

3. Any move will stress them out until they get settled. In this case, those folks mix scratch in with the feed. Scratch is like ice cream to chickens, although in the winter it helps them build heat in their bodies. I use scratch to greet my girls and to put them to bed at night. I use dried mealworms to train them to come when I shake the can. Now the corn fools them. So, if they do not have free supply of good laying feed, (that is, they run out of food often) they again may not lay as well.

4. Bedding. The chickens they received from me bed in pine shavings and so I have never used cedar shavings with them. The cedar could have also affected their "happiness to lay"

5. Weather. This summer has been unusually warm on the Coast. My hens are down on production as well, and I lost two to being egg-bound. Yesterday I went out to check them and one of the hens had a broken shell protruding from her hind end. She was distressed trying to remove it herself. Once I did, she was happy and went about her business. I check my flock at least twice a day - I collect eggs about 1 pm daily. Most have laid by then. If the eggs are dirty (which they actually stay pretty clean on pine shavings - until the rainy season) - I wash them with warm water. I immediately refrigerate them, because I have roosters, and if an egg is fertile, the cold temp (42 degrees) keeps them fresh eggs, not embryos. I also have an egg handlers license.

6. First Aid kit - Veterycin VF is the stuff I was telling you about. I also have Adams Flea Shampoo that I put in a squirt bottle, watered down that I squirt on the girls butts periodically just to make sure if they have mites, the mites are killed. Mites primarily lie in hay.

7. Be careful giving your girls fresh cut grass or green hay - they eat it and it gets stuck in their crop and the crop can get impacted. You will be able to tell when this happens - the crop gets distended and really hard, and their breath smells retched. Just gross. I have lost two and saved one with this issue. Have plain yogurt on hand - its good for them, healthy or ill, and they love it.

Keep my card and call me anytime!

Kat
Thanks Kat, you're amazing! I probably should spray my girls just to be on the safe side. How old are the chickens that you gave to my neighbor?
 

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