- Oct 2, 2008
- 90
- 4
- 41
In the last couple of weeks, I have found shells on the ground of the coop. They are always my Ameracauna's green eggshell. It doesn't happen every day, and I don't know who is actually eating it (I have 6 mixed breeds). She has a tendency to lay on the ground. When I left the coop a few hours ago, she was just getting in the nest box and there was no egg underneath. I left, and when I came back, she was still in the same nest box, but her egg was underneath it, on the ground and EATEN. Did she push it out after laying it? I've never seen her do that.
I haven't read any advice on this problem that doesn't ultimately say to put the offender down. Even if I had the heart to do that, what if they're all eating the egg?
I don't know if this has anything to do with it, but they are all ravenous eaters. They're big (though not fat) girls and I feed them a lot of healthy snacks. Even so, they always seem starved. Is this why they're eating an egg, when available, because they're so hungry? They are not free-rangers (too many predators), but have a large pen and coop and plenty of space.
I haven't read any advice on this problem that doesn't ultimately say to put the offender down. Even if I had the heart to do that, what if they're all eating the egg?
I don't know if this has anything to do with it, but they are all ravenous eaters. They're big (though not fat) girls and I feed them a lot of healthy snacks. Even so, they always seem starved. Is this why they're eating an egg, when available, because they're so hungry? They are not free-rangers (too many predators), but have a large pen and coop and plenty of space.