Red combs, when do eggs come?

5acresandadream

In the Brooder
Oct 31, 2016
89
8
38
North Eastern USA
My girls are a buff Orpington mix, and almost 7 months old. I have noticed their faces and combs starting to darken from pink to red. They don't squat, but none of my other older ones do either. My question is, from anyone with experience, how long after their combs darken does it usually take for eggs to come around?
 
ticktickticktick...so hard to wait.
Those pullets can drive you nuts, the redness can come and go with exertion and relaxation.

Can check pelvic points and vents.
Vent:
Dry, tight, and smaller - usually not laying.
Moist, wide, and larger - usually laying

Pelvic Points 2 bony points(pelvic bones) on either side of vent:
Less than 2 fingertip widths apart usually means not laying.
More than 2 fingertip widths apart usually means laying.


Do you free range?
Free range birds sometimes need to be 'trained'(or re-trained) to lay in the coop nests, especially new layers. Leaving them locked in the coop for 3-4 days (or longer) can help 'home' them to lay in the coop nests. Fake eggs/golf balls in the nests can help 'show' them were to lay. They can be confined to coop 24/7 for a few days to a week, or confine them at least until mid to late afternoon. You help them create a new habit and they will usually stick with it. ..at least for a good while, then repeat as necessary.
 
Hi,

I just wanted to comment on your post since I was, until yesterday, still waiting on my first egg. My Buff is 29 weeks and I was convinced that she'd NEVER lay. Here is the sequence of behaviors that I noticed in the few weeks leading up to her first egg. Her comb and waddle turned really red several weeks ago, so I started watching her closely. Two weeks ago, she began to be more open to me touching her and she seemed to be more curious about what I was doing when I'd enter the coop. Then last week, I noticed that she was moving hay around and making random nests all over the coop. She was doing this in the nesting boxes and also in the hay on the floor...as if she was looking for her favorite spot. She also started getting a little more vocal. I could hear her in the mornings singing a little. This past Sunday, I walked into the coop and she began squatting. You will know when they squat because it is such an obvious pose. She will puff her wings out, flatten her back, and move her tail over and just sit there and let you pet her as long as you want to. There's no mistaking it. So, for me, it was four days after she began squatting. Waiting is TERRIBLE but when that first egg arrives, it is like Christmas morning! Hope this helps!!
 
Hi,

I just wanted to comment on your post since I was, until yesterday, still waiting on my first egg. My Buff is 29 weeks and I was convinced that she'd NEVER lay. Here is the sequence of behaviors that I noticed in the few weeks leading up to her first egg. Her comb and waddle turned really red several weeks ago, so I started watching her closely. Two weeks ago, she began to be more open to me touching her and she seemed to be more curious about what I was doing when I'd enter the coop. Then last week, I noticed that she was moving hay around and making random nests all over the coop. She was doing this in the nesting boxes and also in the hay on the floor...as if she was looking for her favorite spot. She also started getting a little more vocal. I could hear her in the mornings singing a little. This past Sunday, I walked into the coop and she began squatting. You will know when they squat because it is such an obvious pose. She will puff her wings out, flatten her back, and move her tail over and just sit there and let you pet her as long as you want to. There's no mistaking it. So, for me, it was four days after she began squatting. Waiting is TERRIBLE but when that first egg arrives, it is like Christmas morning! Hope this helps!!
welcome-byc.gif
 
Today I checked pelvic bones and to my surprise I found that many of my girls pelvic bones have widened a lot since last week! I can now fit two fingers snuggly. So hopefully that means eggs soon?!
 
Last edited:
Today I checked pelvic bones and to my surprise I found that many of my girls pelvic bones have widened a lot since last week! I can now fit two fingers snuggly. So hopefully that means eggs soon?!
Or they are already laying out in range area?
See my post above.
 
I do let them out for a few hours each day, I'll keep them in for the next few and see if maybe they lay, I hope they aren't laying somewhere in the yard D:
Seen any activity in the coop nests....messed up bedding?
If they don't free range full time, they probably aren't laying out there.
Maybe just restrict it a bit more...let them roam for a couple hours just before roost time.
 

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