Eek! OK getting freaked out about the fatal laying issues of hatchery birds. Mine are still only 3 months so not laying yet but what should I watch for???
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Usually symptoms start out with lack of laying. They will go in the box and come back out but no eggs. They will get really big in the belly area (fluid build up).. They will walk funny. Eventually they get a fatal infection and the last symptoms are lethargy and off food.. Once the lethargy and lack of appetite is seen, there isn't much time (maybe a week..)Eek! OK getting freaked out about the fatal laying issues of hatchery birds. Mine are still only 3 months so not laying yet but what should I watch for???
My first one died from EYP at just past 2 years old. When we opened her up, her abdomen was full of loose yolk. She didn't show any symptoms except one cold day she was sitting in the shade. I picked her up and looked her over but could find nothing wrong. Then a day or so later, she didn't come back from free ranging and we found her dead in her dust hole by the house and did a necropsy.
Then, one by one, they started showing symptoms-going to the nest, sitting for a long time, sometimes straining, then leaving with no egg. Then, they just quit trying. They begin to lose massive amounts of weight, though that may not be obvious unless you pick them up. Then they become very weak and just die unless you euthanize them. Some bloat up with fluid and some do not do that at all. And if you open them up, you see cheesy masses in the oviducts and/or the abdomen itself.
I had one die at a year and a half, a Wyandotte. The Wyandottes from hatcheries are terrible. All my Wyandottes died the same way and other folks have had the exact same experience with them. They're almost worse than sexlinks.
I've also found hatchery Wyandottes incredibly weak. Soft shelled eggs for my first one. I've raised 3 after that that just failed to grow properly. I culled every single one and swore off SLW for good.Wow, very interesting to hear you say this. I have had the exact same problems with hatchery Wyandottes!
I do find that the hatchery birds that will have EYP or another laying problem usually do die before 3 years, and that once they make it to 3 years they are out of the woods--at least on the egg laying front.
OK Officially freaking out now!My first one died from EYP at just past 2 years old. When we opened her up, her abdomen was full of loose yolk. She didn't show any symptoms except one cold day she was sitting in the shade. I picked her up and looked her over but could find nothing wrong. Then a day or so later, she didn't come back from free ranging and we found her dead in her dust hole by the house and did a necropsy.
Then, one by one, they started showing symptoms-going to the nest, sitting for a long time, sometimes straining, then leaving with no egg. Then, they just quit trying. They begin to lose massive amounts of weight, though that may not be obvious unless you pick them up. Then they become very weak and just die unless you euthanize them. Some bloat up with fluid and some do not do that at all. And if you open them up, you see cheesy masses in the oviducts and/or the abdomen itself.
I had one die at a year and a half, a Wyandotte. The Wyandottes from hatcheries are terrible. All my Wyandottes died the same way and other folks have had the exact same experience with them. They're almost worse than sexlinks.
Listen, if you have them, no reason to freak out...just do what you can to prevent laying issues. I don't know if anyone else has said this yet, so my apologies if I'm repeating. But. DO NOT allow them to grow too quickly! I think you said they're about 12 weeks now. If I were you, I would switch them from chick feed & put them on a flock raiser type of feed. By slowing their growth a wee bit, it doesn't mean they won't reach their full potential in size, it means that you COULD be preventing laying issues. Allow them to mature slowly. When they mature too quickly, they begin laying at an age that really is too young; that is when you end up with most of your laying issues, when they begin laying too young. GRanted, some things will happen if they are in the cards. But I know this helps; I buy some hatchery stock each year for layers; since I began switching them to a flock raiser feed at 12 weeks until I saw the first egg, I have had ZERO incidence of lay issues (touch wood!).OK Officially freaking out now!![]()
I'm thinking this is where my limiting feed and forcing free ranging for the juveniles helps slow them down. I have a bunch of Red Sex Links that will be 18 weeks on Thursday and still show no signs of being ready to lay just yet. I've yet to have an egg issue with this hybrid everyone discusses egg issues with. I had a four year old layer that was still going when the fire happened. Well that's about the oldest RSL I've had, so beyond that I can't comment...Listen, if you have them, no reason to freak out...just do what you can to prevent laying issues. I don't know if anyone else has said this yet, so my apologies if I'm repeating. But. DO NOT allow them to grow too quickly! I think you said they're about 12 weeks now. If I were you, I would switch them from chick feed & put them on a flock raiser type of feed. By slowing their growth a wee bit, it doesn't mean they won't reach their full potential in size, it means that you COULD be preventing laying issues. Allow them to mature slowly. When they mature too quickly, they begin laying at an age that really is too young; that is when you end up with most of your laying issues, when they begin laying too young. GRanted, some things will happen if they are in the cards. But I know this helps; I buy some hatchery stock each year for layers; since I began switching them to a flock raiser feed at 12 weeks until I saw the first egg, I have had ZERO incidence of lay issues (touch wood!).
Don't freak out. There's NOTHING you can do to prevent internal laying. It's genetic/hormone based and no feed or any method of raising will change if it's going to happen.
I do agree that you do not want to push sexual maturity or keep them laying with artificial lighting, just let them go with their natural rhythms, but that will still not prevent internal laying--that is more to prevent blow-outs (prolapses).
I keep mine on starter feed until they are "teens" approaching laying age, which is 18% protein. Mine are not grown out too quickly.
Flock Raiser is higher in protein than the starter/grower I give mine, Wynette (also, it's vegetarian). True pullet grower, if you can even get it, is lower protein than starter, starter/grower, and way lower than flock raiser and that is what you are supposed to give to slow down maturation. I just can't really get that here. Pullet grower is 15% protein.