I posted some musing on molting earlier on another thread (Managing Your Flock) about observing some molting differences in my flock and we all had the general standard consensus that it is hormone driven and varies with each chicken...usually around 18 months for the first hard molt which usually happens in fall.
But after pondering this a bit, I'm wondering....is that really "natural" or the result of commercial breeding.
In my flock of 20 birds I am noticing molting at what is the expected 18 months/ 2 years and also a number of my 13 month olds molting. Egg count is down...I get it. Those hens are GSL, BSL, Wellie Mixes (RIR/Welsummer...one may be pure Welsummer but off colored per breeder), a couple of mutts (1st generation mix from typical commercial layers with White Leghorn roo), Wyandottes and Delawares (from breeders).
What I am pondering is how natural is the "fall" molt in hens. We all proclaim it is so their bodies can shut down, rebuild and restock for the next year....but why fall. If I were going to lose my feathers, living in the northern hemisphere, I would do that in summer not in the cold of late fall/early winter (November-December). A number of my birds are really naked. They don't seem to "mind" the cold, but then again they don't look particularly happy or healthy...just the "normal" "off-color" during molt....or is that so "normal" in fall?
So...and this is my point....I have several hens (BSL and Wellie mixes) and a Silkie that went broody in Spring....May/June. Since I like to use broodies to actually hatch chicks (amazingly the hens do a better job than I do with heat lamps...go figure!), I have 3 hens who brooded for me in Spring. They each went through a molt after brooding...another "natural" phenomenom. Those hens are all glossy and fat now, and laying eggs for me.
So......I'm wondering....is it really natural for hens to molt in fall to recharge or is that the "normal" we've come to expect since we've tinkered with our bloodlines such to breed out broodiness to get those all important eggs.
If we bred for natural broodiness traits...which tend to occur in spring...would our hens molt in summer and then lay more in winter????
Has anyone manipulated their flock this way? Has anyone read anyone who has done some natural studies with a flock to try to get back to normal brooding patterns?
Just curious.
Lady of McCamley
EDITED: for spelling and clarity (hopefully