SoCal Chicken Mama
Chirping
- Jul 3, 2024
- 66
- 90
- 58
My 4 chickens are 23 weeks old and have not started laying. (Rhode Island Red, Buff Orpington, Easter Egger, and Golden Sex Link (who may actually be another RIR, I can hardly tell them apart). After a wicked hot summer, we are now experiencing wicked cold fall nights. If there was precipitation I'm sure it would be snow. This is a CA desert adjacent county (Inland Empire), so that is not very normal for us. It's been between 30 and 40 degrees F every night since it turned cold. The days are usually sunny and 70-something. Coop is clean and dry. They spend their days either in their 87 sq.ft run, or in the 48 sq. ft. chicken tractor pasturing on the grass. Nest boxes available in coup, on top of coop, and in chicken tractor. But the days are short so I doubt if they get 12 hours of sunlight daily.
What I am wondering is if I need to put the brooder plate (which converts to an upright heater) back in the coop at night? I have a timer that goes 7:00pm-7:00am. It is full dark by 5pm. Could it just be too cold for them to start laying? I expected eggs at 20 wks. (which I now know may be too soon). The feed store told me to put them on layer food. Since no eggs yet, I give them 1/2 and 1/2. If they are not going to lay until spring because of the cold, I am worried they will get too much calcium and get sick. If I feed calcium containing foods on the side so only the ones who need it will take it, they all eat it. They get a little bit of veg. in the afternoons, but the veg. garden is pretty much dead now.
Should I put them back on starter feed? I'm so conflicted. I was worried that they would have soft shell eggs if I didn't start them on some calcium at 20 wks.
Also, they will not come back to the coop/run at night voluntarily, and the chicken tractor doesn't have enough shelter for them to stay there all night. There is a shade cover, but no real walls. I have to go in there and catch them every night and carry them back to the coop. They make a big fuss and try to escape, especially the Rhode Island Red. We call her Rhody the Runaway. I've even seen her fly up to the top of the 6 ft. fence and consider going into the neighbor's 4 dog yard! Once in a while I can coax a few of them into a dog crate for the transfer, but never all of them. Could all this chasing and grabbing be preventing egg laying? I can't let them find their own way to/from "the pasture" (chicken tractor). We have owls and hawks here in suburbia, which I see routinely, and coyotes and bobcats, which I never see, but they are seen regularly in the wine country, which is 8 miles away.
What I am wondering is if I need to put the brooder plate (which converts to an upright heater) back in the coop at night? I have a timer that goes 7:00pm-7:00am. It is full dark by 5pm. Could it just be too cold for them to start laying? I expected eggs at 20 wks. (which I now know may be too soon). The feed store told me to put them on layer food. Since no eggs yet, I give them 1/2 and 1/2. If they are not going to lay until spring because of the cold, I am worried they will get too much calcium and get sick. If I feed calcium containing foods on the side so only the ones who need it will take it, they all eat it. They get a little bit of veg. in the afternoons, but the veg. garden is pretty much dead now.
Should I put them back on starter feed? I'm so conflicted. I was worried that they would have soft shell eggs if I didn't start them on some calcium at 20 wks.
Also, they will not come back to the coop/run at night voluntarily, and the chicken tractor doesn't have enough shelter for them to stay there all night. There is a shade cover, but no real walls. I have to go in there and catch them every night and carry them back to the coop. They make a big fuss and try to escape, especially the Rhode Island Red. We call her Rhody the Runaway. I've even seen her fly up to the top of the 6 ft. fence and consider going into the neighbor's 4 dog yard! Once in a while I can coax a few of them into a dog crate for the transfer, but never all of them. Could all this chasing and grabbing be preventing egg laying? I can't let them find their own way to/from "the pasture" (chicken tractor). We have owls and hawks here in suburbia, which I see routinely, and coyotes and bobcats, which I never see, but they are seen regularly in the wine country, which is 8 miles away.