Oldest Chicken?

princess araucana

Songster
11 Years
Nov 18, 2008
277
3
129
Rhode Island
I know there are MANY factors that can shorten a chickens life. And I have heard different estimates on how long a perfectly healthy chicken can live, like up to 8 - 10 years!
But I just heard someone say how all of her chickens died of "old age" at 4 years old!

How old is your oldest chicken?

(mine are only 2.5 yrs young)
 
Well I had to start over due to hurricanes, but the oldest I knew of, personally was my mother-in-law's 8 year old barred rock hen. She was missing a few toes and my mom tried to talk her into putting her in a soup pot, but mom-in-law said that even though she didn't lay well, she still got an egg from her once in a while and she kept her until a raccoon took her. Mom just wanted to incubate a batch of her eggs so mom-in-law could start over with fresh stock, but it didn't happen exactly like that.
 
Our oldest is 2 years old and still living. My friend has a 14 year old hen thaat lays 1 egg every month!
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WOW! That's old!
Our oldest that we know the age of is two years. But their parents are at least three years older then that.
 
My oldest is here sitting on my lap, definitely a pet. Taco Belle is a 7+ year old banty hen. Found her so age is only how long we've had her, but she arrived laying
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Great question!

Found this thread: https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=35213

I
have noticed a high degree of variability in my chickens' life spans. My speculative explanation for this is that chickens have not been selectively bred to have a long life span, as dogs, cats, horses and other pets have to some degree. Most chickens don't live past 6 months to 2 years because they are slaughtered, so I'm guessing most hatcheries may not have a desire to remove genetic traits that might reduce life expectancy from their gene pool. As long as a chicken produces meat and or eggs for 2 years, their genes may beconsidered worthy of passing on.

I welcome any feedback / critiques of this theory, because this is pure speculation!

Personally, I would love to find breeders who have selected breeding stock for a long and healthy life span, while producing as many eggs as possible over their life, because my chickens are pets and I have lost way too many at 3-4 years old. My oldest was 9 years old.
 
Wow, 14 years old? I think that's the oldest chicken I've heard of. My flock of bantams aren't even a year old yet but I've heard that bantams live longer than large fowl chickens. Does anyone know if that's really true?
 
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