cjwaldon - I had a rat eating eggs. I didn't catch it in the trap but because I checked the trap so often I figured out why I suddenly had no eggs. The dang thing was waiting till they laid then ran in and got the eggs! It even tried to eat the fake egg lol. I thought that thing was plaster but it's plastic. That rat really tried to eat that thing too.
Manoz - the interesting thing is, the one that laid regularly all summer during the horrific drought and unusually hot 109 degree weather is not laying now. Yet one that layed only sporadically during that weather is laying regularly now. I was thinking the one that laid all summer was molting but it must be a light molt. I don't hold it against her, I'm sure her body needs a rest after doing that during such a stressful season.
I'm getting one every day from my dark cornish but as she was hatched in April I expect that. And they're only medium eggs so she won't be a valuable layer anyway. She does love my rooster and gives him an outlet for his teenage energy, if you know what I mean. So she is serving the an important role in keeping the flock more peaceful. They all seem to lay really well their first year. The rest of the layers hatched the year before so now we're seeing what they do once they're no longer pullets.
It's really funny, the one that I almost culled last year saved herself by proving to be an Excellent broody and momma. Now she's proving herself to be a great layer, she's one of the ones that are laying now and she laid some during the heat too. So the one I almost culled for being a butt pain is really one of my best birds. Go figure. She's no longer a butt pain either. She has a really interesting and funny personality. She does things none of the rest will do, like jump high to grab a treat and fly up to perch on high things outside the coop. She's one of the first to alert me that there is a problem out there and the first to run off a stray cat. I guess that butt pain-ness was just her teenage oddness and now she's grown into a great chicken LOL.
I've been seeing, in the last couple of days, a lot of big changes in the dynamics of the flock. The rooster appears to be starting to dominate some that formerly kicked his butt. And the roosters hatchmate pullet is 'moving on up' too I think. So maybe part of the lack of eggs is just plain stress from the severe changes in dynamics happening. For instance, my (formerly, I suppose) lead hen is running from the rooster whereas before she pecked the CRAP out of him if he came close. And she seems to be hanging around the youngest, some four month olds. Even roosted with them last night. She hasn't laid in two weeks and I've been wondering why. She molted in Aug-Sept so that wasn't it. The "butt pain" one I mentioned above is holding her own, as is the roosters "wife" I call her. And those two are laying. Maybe for the others it's just stress?