- Aug 17, 2016
- 10,044
- 51,265
- 1,192
I have 7 chickens and we are still getting 6-7 eggs a day.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
So true.Yes but how old are they? If they are under a year, then that is to be expected. Your location and climate may also play into that. Next year when they are another year older you may not be quite so fortunate, so do be prepared for that and not worry that there is something wrong.
The only real impact cold has is if there are huge temperature swings which will stress them. Stress = fewer eggs.We got them in the spring, so yes they are under a year old. I can't wait until winter is over. I hate winter even though the chickens are still laying eggs![]()
How do you "replace layers every 3 years" What do you do with them? Id like to know so that I can figure out a way to rotate. What if they are still laying, not 5 times a week but still laying 3 times a week perhaps, and are good and consistent during winter? I like to shuffle eggs around during the day to a fav nest box, if I am home, as 1 hen just love sitting on the eggs throughout the day and she will sit on the eggs over night if we were unable to collect that day.- Do or don't you supplement light to keep your hens in production over winter?
No, I don't. It lets them have a break whilst keeping my electricity bill lowered.
- Are there other ways to ensure your flock stays productive, for example by replenishing the layers with young hens yearly?
I suppose you could replace them yearly, though that seems terribly cost inefficient. The 6 months it takes for them to start laying is spent consuming feed... When compared to a month or so break in laying, it really seems counterproductive. I do replace the layers every three years though....
- What do you do to prevent the eggs from freezing in the nest boxes, especially the folks that can't collect them in a timely manner.
I'm fortunate enough that I can collect often throughout the day, so I don't do anything else.
- Do or don't you supplement light to keep your hens in production over winter?
Nope. I just let nature take it's course. I'm no producing commercially.
- Are there other ways to ensure your flock stays productive, for example by replenishing the layers with young hens yearly?
All my current ladies are les than a year old, except for Ol' Red, who is two. When they stop laying I will probably get more, or else breed my favorite layers when the show sign of slowing.
- What do you do to prevent the eggs from freezing in the nest boxes, especially the folks that can't collect them in a timely manner.
Itrely gets cold enough during the day for the eggs to freeze, and I collect them daily
- Tips for keeping winter layers happy and healthy?
Fermented feed, ground oyster and egg shells, clean bedding and nesting boxes.
Yum! I LOVE canned chicken!There have been a few years I was very happy to get whole flocks of spent layers for my winter meat needs and find it's a wonderful thing when people realize that others can utilize the birds they no longer can justify supporting due to lack of laying. This past season my sister gave me her whole flock of 17 hens and earlier in the year had given me her extra cockerels and those birds are now in a jar on the shelf, a flavorful winter meat supply that I am most grateful for this year.
There are many who just let old layers age out and die in their flocks and I find that to be even more of an irresponsible approach than any other....that bird often dies a suffering death and the meat is wasted, all because a person doesn't want to make the hard choices of what to do with a retired layer that is still in possession of an aging and soon to be malfunctioning reproductive system. The most humane and responsible choice, IMO, is to cull those old birds while they are still healthy and thriving so they don't have to sicken/suffer and die and their meat be wasted when others would welcome the food.