I have 6 hatchery buff orpingtons, all just under 1 year old. 5 out of the 6 lay around 3-4 eggs per week. Sometimes they'll lay eggs two days in a row but usually there are break days in between, and all those chickens' eggs look great. Then there is Brownie, who makes an egg every day with very few exceptions. The only break days she's had have come after laying weird eggs: 2 tailed eggs and more recently 2 shell-less eggs and a nested shell-less fart egg. Unfortunately I most likely caused the shell-less ones because I had to switch feeds. I had been offering chick starter alongside layer crumbles up until recently because my chickens took a long time to warm up to the larger sized oyster shell grid. Eventually they ate it, so I quit giving the layer feed because it was barely being eaten and just getting filthy. I reduced to just the chick feed for a couple weeks, and then I had to switch feeds completely to a locally-produced all-flock crumble.
I thought all my chickens were eating oyster shell grit just fine since their eggs have nice hard shells, but I presume now that Brownie was the sole eater of the layer crumbles when I quit offering it. I can't go back to offering that layer crumble on the side because I can't get bags that are newer than 9 months old and it doesn't get eaten fast enough; even small bags mold quickly when in a sealed container. I was starting to see the same bag date issue with the chick starter, so I have now switched to a locally-produced all flock crumble and want to keep that since all of my chickens LOVE it and it just smells better and fresh. But...it's an all flock mix, so Brownie needs to get her calcium from somewhere.
Since Brownie seems to not like the rock-type calcium carbonate, I have tried two other things this week:
1. Cooking and crushing up eggshell. She didn't eat it so I mixed it in with the new yummy feed. She picked out the feed and left the shell.
2. Crushing a bit of dried crickets in oyster shell grit to get them all powdery with calcium and to coat the larger pieces with cricket bits. This did work to get her to eat some but also doesn't feel like the best solution.
So, I'm looking for recommendations on what to do with this situation that can get Brownie her calcium while not overdoing it for the other five who are eating the oyster shell grit just fine (but also lay fewer eggs per week).
I thought all my chickens were eating oyster shell grit just fine since their eggs have nice hard shells, but I presume now that Brownie was the sole eater of the layer crumbles when I quit offering it. I can't go back to offering that layer crumble on the side because I can't get bags that are newer than 9 months old and it doesn't get eaten fast enough; even small bags mold quickly when in a sealed container. I was starting to see the same bag date issue with the chick starter, so I have now switched to a locally-produced all flock crumble and want to keep that since all of my chickens LOVE it and it just smells better and fresh. But...it's an all flock mix, so Brownie needs to get her calcium from somewhere.
Since Brownie seems to not like the rock-type calcium carbonate, I have tried two other things this week:
1. Cooking and crushing up eggshell. She didn't eat it so I mixed it in with the new yummy feed. She picked out the feed and left the shell.
2. Crushing a bit of dried crickets in oyster shell grit to get them all powdery with calcium and to coat the larger pieces with cricket bits. This did work to get her to eat some but also doesn't feel like the best solution.
So, I'm looking for recommendations on what to do with this situation that can get Brownie her calcium while not overdoing it for the other five who are eating the oyster shell grit just fine (but also lay fewer eggs per week).