In my opinion about the laying ability of asil is this: The reason that people are told this is the case stems from is the fact that the purists don't incubate, and I'm not talking in the US. It's is a cultural thing where if the hen lays more than one setting, she isn't pure to them, when the fact is they were pure, just didn't brood as long. When you let your hen set, and leave the chicks with her, she will brood them sometimes all season long, thus one setting. It isn't that she can't lay more, it's that she doesn't because of brooding. You really can't beat a well bred asil as a broody, period. If you take eggs from them, they will lay more, but will still set eventually, even on an empty nest, and you won't stop her from doing it. If you take the chicks away after hatched, she will lay again and set after a break. They are not a production breed by any means, but neither are they poor layers, it's all how you manage them. I've had hens where I've taken chicks from them after they hatched, set 4 times in one season. The one thing you will see though, is they don't lay to lay. When they start laying, their plan is to hatch them, that's it.