How many chickens do you have. (I should know but can't remember) I have 30 and I can't tell I'm mostly at work when eggs are laid.I think I told the story about me crying when I came home to chickens in the yard. My daughter was about 3 or 4. It was in the summer of 1980.
1. I went to fairs and shows and asked tons of questions. I think that was one of the best things I did. I asked about breeds, and requirements, egg laying, heating, coops. My grandparents only feed the same grains they feed the horses and left overs. I got the scoop about chicken grains from the *show* folks.
2. Room for them to forage.
I am a firm believer if the chickens are eating the grass down bare you simply have too many chickens for the area.
If you have limited space you need to plant different types of clovers, spinach, Kale's in your grasses. To many have chickens in barren soils. If you are even limited to 12 foot by 6 foot you should cover half of it and grow something. Keep the birds off of it for a month. Dump your deep litter out of the coop into the area they will be in. Grow out the other area. Then reverse it the next month. Cover your newer grass with the deep litter from the coop so the chickens can't rip it all up. Get the other side growing and cover it with hay, leaves or straw. Keep alternating it until you have well established ground cover. Invest in a temporary fence. Let the chickens out in different areas of the yard.
3. Do not get more chickens than you need or your space can provide. Make a plan for the chickens and stick to the plan. The chickens should pay for themselves. If your chicken cost you money or stress it is a cull. Chickens should bring you joy and food.
4. Do not make emotional decisions about chickens. If a chicken is *off*. you simply know it, if you spend time with your chickens. Chickens do not complain when they are in pain, they just act *off*. Examine the chicken, do not wait. Tomorrow will probably be to late. If it is late and dark, bring it in the house with good lighting. Have a *set up* available at all times. (Dog kennel, box) Do the exam. Know what you are looking for. This does no good if you have never picked up your chickens. If you have no idea what a crop is or where it is located. If you have never palpated your hens just before lay and just after to know what they feel like. Know your birds. For all of you out there who have never felt a chicken with an egg ready for lay. Pick up one of your hens before they lay and feel the egg. Feel how firm the belly is. Later in the day after they lay, pick up the same hen and feel it again. feel how soft the belly is. Open the beak and look inside. Know what a healthy mouth smells like and looks like. Feel the crop, some of the hens crops are small and tight, some are large and a bit softer. Know what hens have what type of crops. Young birds usually have large hard crops. If they don't, something is off. I can't impress enough the importance of knowing what chicken layed what egg. A hen off lay is sometimes the first sign something is off. If you crack open a bloody egg, how are you to know who you need to watch or examine? For goodness sake do not let your birds simply die because you don't know. Be a good Stewart and kill your sick birds.
5. Be open minded enough to implement new ideas. Keep good records for both health and money. Records will let you know if new ideas are working.