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That was a joke. They were my old hens laying today when I plugged in the timer.Congratulations on your new eggs.

By the way, I unplugged it again.

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That was a joke. They were my old hens laying today when I plugged in the timer.Congratulations on your new eggs.
HAHAHAHA! I was wondering! I didn't want to be the one to tell you that those eggs arriving on the day you added the light were a coincidence!That was a joke. They were my old hens laying today when I plugged in the timer.
By the way, I unplugged it again.Your explanation convinced my girlfriend that letting things happen naturally is best.
That was a joke. They were my old hens laying today when I plugged in the timer.
By the way, I unplugged it again.Your explanation convinced my girlfriend that letting things happen naturally is best.
I have my light go on at 5 a.m. year-round, so I do have some lighting. For 20 years I did the 14 hours of light in the winter & didn't feel it was detrimental to the girls. I dialed it back 5 years ago when I got my first broody hen in 20 years & kept it that way because 5 of 9 of my next bunch of blue Wyandottes were constantly broody & with 14 hours of light a day, they would be broody in the winter also.Thanks for that!
And? Do you use supplemental lighting?
Thanks for that info! That’s good to know.I have my light go on at 5 a.m. year-round, so I do have some lighting. For 20 years I did the 14 hours of light in the winter & didn't feel it was detrimental to the girls. I dialed it back 5 years ago when I got my first broody hen in 20 years & kept it that way because 5 of 9 of my next bunch of blue Wyandottes were constantly broody & with 14 hours of light a day, they would be broody in the winter also.
No, they wouldn't 'run out of eggs' but constant laying could/would degrade their overall health which would/could decrease their life or laying capacity.I would love to see the evidence that lighting to 14 hours a day cuts down the # of years they lay. Just like humans, they would most likely stop laying eggs for other reasons BEFORE they run out of eggs. Production breeds may be the exception. JMHO
I would love to see the evidence that lighting to 14 hours a day cuts down the # of years they lay. Just like humans, they would most likely stop laying eggs for other reasons BEFORE they run out of eggs. Production breeds may be the exception. JMHO
Using lighting, when done correctly, does not keep them from molting & resting.No, they wouldn't 'run out of eggs' but constant laying could/would degrade their overall health which would/could decrease their life or laying capacity.