Can anyone here tell me why I'm feeding 14, 2 year old hens and only getting 4 eggs a day??
The girls all free range so I'm open to the possibility of them just out laying, however, we've had almost daily instances of shell-less eggs being "laid" on the poop board under the roosting bar. For a couple of weeks I was banking on the fact that they might have been sharing egg drop syndrome among themselves and that there was nothing I could really do beyond wait it out. They weren't/aren't showing any other symptoms of disease or illness - all are eating and drinking, enthusiastically foraging as usual, only one has lost feathers (but unfortunately she is the bottom of the pecking order so I believe she's being picked on), so all in all, egg drop sounded like the most likely culprit.
Then I learned that egg drop is still super rare in the US and now I've come across information that says they are possibly overrun with worms? I've contacted local vets and my extension office and no one is willing to perform a fecal float test and I'd rather not worm them without any other symptoms other than the lack of eggs/lack of egg shells, but I'm getting to the end of my rope with this silliness.
Does anyone have any ideas or suggestions for what I can do in this situation? We have new chicks in the brooder that are ready to join the flock, but I'd rather get whatever the older girls' issue is under control before doing that.
Thank you!
The girls all free range so I'm open to the possibility of them just out laying, however, we've had almost daily instances of shell-less eggs being "laid" on the poop board under the roosting bar. For a couple of weeks I was banking on the fact that they might have been sharing egg drop syndrome among themselves and that there was nothing I could really do beyond wait it out. They weren't/aren't showing any other symptoms of disease or illness - all are eating and drinking, enthusiastically foraging as usual, only one has lost feathers (but unfortunately she is the bottom of the pecking order so I believe she's being picked on), so all in all, egg drop sounded like the most likely culprit.
Then I learned that egg drop is still super rare in the US and now I've come across information that says they are possibly overrun with worms? I've contacted local vets and my extension office and no one is willing to perform a fecal float test and I'd rather not worm them without any other symptoms other than the lack of eggs/lack of egg shells, but I'm getting to the end of my rope with this silliness.
Does anyone have any ideas or suggestions for what I can do in this situation? We have new chicks in the brooder that are ready to join the flock, but I'd rather get whatever the older girls' issue is under control before doing that.
Thank you!