- Thread starter
- #11
RufusJones
Hatching
- Oct 6, 2020
- 5
- 19
- 3
You definitely have a point. Heck, just look at my wife. 2 years AFTER menopause, she turns up pregnant! I'll be drawing Social Security before Baby-Girl starts high school. (my 5 yr-old is the reason I'm not going to be able to butcher this non-laying hen).Anything is possible when you deal with living animals. You just don't get guarantees. It is possible.
But I'll tell a story. I once got true Ameraucana eggs from a breeder and hatched them in March. I kept three pullets. The first two of those started laying in the first week of December, two of them, a couple of days apart. The third one was a couple of weeks later. Nine months from hatch. In December, the shortest days of the year. I do not use artificial lights to extend the days, days were about 10 hours long. Those broke all the rules. Was I getting frustrated? Well, yes I was. I really wanted those blue egg genes in my flock.
When I hatched their eggs, crossing them with my barnyard mix "from production breeds" rooster, their daughters typically started laying around 20 to 24 weeks. That part surprised me, I expected them to take after their mothers.
Will she ever lay an egg? I don't have a clue.