Persistent egg eaters

EmmaDonovan

Crossing the Road
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The culprits are two white leghorns. They literally stand right at the nest boxes and wait for hens to come out then run in and eat the eggs. We have cameras on the nest boxes but they're eating the eggs before I can even get out there (I have to go through a locked door, a locked gate, and the locked coop door).

There are wooden eggs in each nest box. The hens free-feed oyster shell and 18% protein layer pellets by Scratch & Peck. We put 20% protein starter mash in two treat dispenser toys once a week and also use that occasionally as scratch.

We're in the desert so there's little to nothing for them to forage. They get grubs once a week. We toss in a handful of frozen peas, frozen berries, etc. a few times a week. As every day greens, they get a little wheat grass, oat grass, spinach or broccoli. Dandelions grow wild on our property and we feed them those when in season.

They have ~18 sq ft per hen and the runs are cluttered with boxes, boards, tunnels, toys, bricks, palm fronds, branches, roosts, line-of-sight breaks, swings, etc.

My roommate who can build anything is keen on building some rollout nest boxes but she's busy right how adding an extension to the run.

These two leghorns have been a royal PITA (never getting leghorns again!) but they're also my best layers. We tried filling egg shells with mustard and that didn't deter them. In another thread someone suggested dish detergent but wouldn't that make them sick? I want them to lose interest in the eggs but I don't want to make them ill.

Is there something else we can fill egg shells with?
 
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My roommate who can build anything is keen on building some rollout nest boxes but she's busy right how adding an extension to the run.
This is the way. Be sure to make the part the egg rolls into chicken proof. They have those long, snake-like necks and will reach in after them.

Unfortunately, once they start eating eggs, it can be hard to stop them. I mean, why would they, right? That's good food!

Hope your roommate can get something done. Aside from that (and making sure nutrition/protein/calcium is up to standard), it's usually the soup pot for birds like this.
 
As a simple and quick option to try while you wait (and certainly before doing something more drastic like culling them from the flock), you could try giving them some proper animal protein: a tin of sardines, dairy products, leftovers from your table if that's allowed where you live, for example. All the foods you listed that you give them are vegetable, and maybe they just really need something missing from them, and present in eggs and other animal foods. Worth a try surely?
 
Now that's interesting idea. I always feel a bit guilty they don't get the bugs and other critters that chickens have in non-desert landscapes.

Five weeks ago I started a mealworm farm so I will have live worms for them soon. I have fed them tuna and salmon in the past during molts and when they had fowl pox, but I can certainly do more of that. Thanks for the suggestion!

Edit: they eat the shells - everything. What if I coated an (empty) egg shell with something like tea tree oil? I've heard of people dabbing that on the backs of hens' heads to prevent other chickens from pulling their feathers out. Is it a natural repellant? Can chickens smell it? Would a nest box with an egg covered in tea tree oil deter other hens from laying in that nest box (obviously I don't want that)?
 
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