Depends on her age If she is a normal egg layer in all other aspects and a healthy keeper and all she does is starts and ends her year with soft shells..give her added calcium at those times. Not really a big concern.I have a red sex link that had been laying well all winter, but recently she has been laying thin shelled eggs. Sometimes they get broken in the nest boxes and are eaten.
I know when a hen starts laying after a break the shells can have a few issues Until the plumbing is working well again, but this hen has laid an egg every day since 2 weeks after she came into lay. When she first started laying she also had thin shells for a while. Is it common to have some shell issues? It seems to be more frequent with her than any another hen in my flock.
Stop worring about worms in one poop. Yes..you see them. But they all have worms. Perhaps what you have been doing is killing them and making them leave..have you thought of that? Good job on adding space for your birds..Update on featherpicking: Adding more floor space to the coop, and a flock block, and meat to their diet, and spritzing the feather picked areas with a vinegar/water solution seems to have done the trick. I don't think I am seeing any more feather eating off the back.
Question about garlic, garlic powder, and worms: that one poop with worms surprised me. I'm adding garlic to the water, and this weekend will do a 3 day push of a grated carrot, garlic, and buttermilk mixture. I grow my own garlic, but don't have enough as I've read I need one clove per hen 3 days running. I can go buy garlic, although it goes against the grain, or garlic powder. Conventional wisdom says the powder works too, but.. my instinct is that it would lack the vitality of fresh garlic. Does anyone have experience using garlic for working? As I've said, I've never had a worming problem before.
Also, I still don't know whether one poop with worms means I have an overload of worms?
sorry, I know this isn't nearly as exciting as new chicks!
and BDM, what about pics of your trailer coop in progress?
Quote: I agree 100% ...shipped eggs are nerve wracking..you will do great!!
It could be anything Trav..Is he eating ok? drinking ok? showing any other signs? anyone else sick? what do you feed? what is the protein level? Do they have access to sun?Ok kids, I have a 10 week old LF cockerel that is walking with a curled foot. He is in no pain. I squeezed and poked and pulled and twisted his toes and foot. It is not a slipped tendon nor bumblefoot. I have read it may be a vitamin B12 deficiency. I will be getting some liquid B vitamin tomorrow. Is there anything else you all think it could be and/or treat?
Quote: I do not know if Sunny's eggs will get bigger or not. Is she Heritage? I tell everyone not to worry about a pullets laying.Give them till they are a year.
lol...funny and cute post!! Glad you are OKI had a pleasant surprise when I got home last night. I have an incubator with a doz or so eggs that I took from abandoned nests from irresponsible broody hens. I was talking to DH and rolling eggs and the very last egg had pipped. By bed time, nothing new and the egg seemed silent. At 3:20am I have a new chick. I rarely name them unless the grand kids do but this little one will be Valentino or Valentina. Hopefully the later. I don't like eating friends. (No pic's. On vacation this summer, a restaurant had nailed a board over a hole on their boardwalk and clutsy me, tripped over the board and fell, smashing my 1 month old camera on the ground. Embarrassingly enough, people came running from everywhere and all I could say was "Is my camera ok? repeatedly. DH was trying to clean the blood off my knees and I was so mad because no one was checking my camera. Priorities, you know. The restaurant offered to pay for my camera but it appeared to work. UNTIL 3 WEEKS AGO! It's a nice camera so It should be repaired by next week. And back to chicken pictures. Most grandmas carry around photo's of their grandchildren and I always apologize but ask I do have chicken pic's. lol
I will scoot over and take a peekHi,
I've just started hatching my first lot of chicks naturally, and have no idea what/how/if I need to intervene. Could some more knowledgable peeps look at my thread please?
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/...tched-eggs-newbie-needs-help-natural-hatching
Quote: I do it right over the top of paint.
Never worry about a pullet..they are just getting going and some take longer than others. If she hits onne year old and she has problems..she is chicken fricaseeI have a NN pullet that recently started to lay, first no shell for two days, followed by a very large egg. For the last two weeks she has laid a giant double Yorker every other day.......I'm thinking this is all her system getting going and more regular. This shouldn't be a problem, I think. Anyone get regular double yokes?
Cute!!Aoxa - love the look of the barn and plans. Looks like you can do so much with it.
I candled some eggs tonight trying to figure out a detached air sac. I found this egg with the dime size cells(s). They look like a cluster of tadpole eggs. Is this normal? The dark spot was just dirt. These are the same egg.
How long have these eggs been incubating?
Is a detached air sac easy to see?You can see this detached one pretty easy. Not all of them are easy to see.![]()
Checking out lunch.
Hello..nice to see a new face posting! My grandma white washed her coop e o y. I have not white washed mine in 5 years. I am doing it this spring.Pigeonguy or others that have used white wash;
Have you added a pigment to it? If so what have you used for pigment, I've read brick dust for red, I was hoping for a grey green color.
How often do you repaint? Is it really every year?
I'm in the process of collecting pallets to build a new (bigger!) coop and planned on white washing it.