Oyster shell to encourage immature hens to lay?

julietma

In the Brooder
11 Years
Jul 8, 2008
20
0
22
More Feed Store lore here, just checking it with you all.

My hens are big, fat, beautiful Barred Plymouth Rocks, the eldest must be at least six months (she's a rescue, so exact age not known). The younger two are about four and a half months.

None of them has a red comb or wattle yet, although the eldest is pinking up. I read that starting them on layer feed could help them, so I started them on it last month. Since none of them are laying, still, the Feed Store guys suggested I give them oyster shell. I bought some, but figured I'd better check this info with a more reliable source.

So, will oyster shell get them started laying? Or should I just hold onto the shell until I see that first egg?
 
Do not give them supplemental oyster shell until they are actually laying eggs.

Overloading their bodies with a calcium mineral when they are not using it can lead to kidney problems over time.

You cannot 'encourage' a hen to lay before her body is ready to produce eggs. Eggs are more than just shell. She has to begin producing the inner parts of the egg first before a shell is even needed.
 
I threatened to start making Chicken Gumbo if I didnt see any eggs, 2 days later one of my "hens" starting crowing and the other one laid an egg. Guess the rooster in disguise wanted me to know why he wasnt laying
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A hen is going to start laying when her body tells her it's time. Even feeding them caviar from a silver spoon - or slapping them around - is not going to change that.
 
Well I just got my ameracaunas and rhode island whites to start laying this week (they are about 26 weeks). I told them last weekend it's time to make some eggs and within a few days they had it down. I get 0-2 eggs per day and they are laid after lunch some time.
So try having "the talk" with them...
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Jen
 
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Isn't it true also that if the hen starts laying early that there is a better chance for her to prolapse? Mine are 22 weeks now and one is laying and when I read that they could prolapse early I started turning off the coop light and let it come natural. I don't want to deal with prolapse if I can prevent it somewhat.
 
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I agree 100%! I never want to deal with prolapse, whatever it is.

Prolapse is something I have absolutely no desire with which to deal (couldn't end with a preposition, sorry, I 'd rather read like a bad Latin translation). My understanding is that it's a situation where the lining through which the egg travels is moved outside the body with the egg that's too massive to progress naturally. Unfortunately, chickens abhor anomoly (much like the adolescents I teach!) and they "go for" the vent of the offending chicken. It's a bad situation. I particularly worry about it as my Red Sex Link pullets have begun laying at 16/17 weeks. So far, they look ok, in spite of one of them laying a massive egg within an egg.

-Christian
 

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