I know that would be hard for me too, but thinking it will help her may make it easier
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I live with my parents still, they absolutely will not allow her indoors. Occasionally I ignore them if she needs a warm bath. But even then they get very upset with me over it. They are not understanding at all.why can't you bring her in? no room?
I'd need to to go back and read through the writing about it again, but I'm pretty sure the initial thing was withholding all food for three days, withholding water for a full day at the start, tooI know that would be hard for me too, but thinking it will help her may make it easier
It's quite warm currently, tooI'd have a hard time doing this, especially the withholding water too. I'd worry she would get dehydrated.
It's quite warm currently, too
Do you think there's a chance it would still work if she had access to water?
I know you might not be able to answer that, but.
Ugh, I just wish she'd stop laying.![]()
I have completely stopped egg production in my pekin more than once by very strict environment changes only. The first time she was 1.5-2 years old and laying daily. The second time she was 5.5. She is almost 7 now and hasn't been reproductively active for over a year because of our daily efforts - but we also don't have a life.
We only do this because Thimbleberry would have died both times without it. We are also under the guidance of an avian veterinarian. Thimble gets regular veterinary visits where her weight, body condition, and organ function is tested via blood. I wouldn't be doing this without the advice of my vet.
If you want more information to discuss with your vet let me know, I am happy to share what has worked for Thimbleberry.
It's so sad we can't even trust vets and doctors any longer [just my opinion]
We have to be our own vets really and they are even going to make that hard for us since soon we won't be able to get meds without a prescription.
Thank you for your reply!I don't think I'd restrict access to water completely, maybe just reduce access that first day, especially this time of year. The way the page reads Fall would probably be the more ideal time. So with that in mind, if you do try a force molt, I'd use those steps as more of a basic outline than something you need to follow super strictly. You know better than anyone what's best for your girls.
I found another discussion on the force molting here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...-take-a-break-from-laying-eggs.1436013/page-2. @Isaac 0 actually mentions it could be fatal to completely remove their water while an egg is being formed.
I'm sorry if @KaleIAm already said something and I just missed the post, but sounds like they might be able to give you some better advice from their own experience.