@Hinotori you got a BYC Friend Badge!! Congratulations!
Long overdue in my humble opinion!

Long overdue in my humble opinion!
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@Hinotori
you got a BYC Friend Badge!! Congratulations!![]()
Long overdue in my humble opinion!
Seems to be an undecided subject - extra light in the coop. I've decided to give it a try just to see what happens. We've been without eggs now for about 2 months and as much as I enjoy their company, we DID get them for eggs.
I've spent the last week building a microproccessor controlled light system that automatically calculates sunrise and sunset for my LAT/LON. Based on the sunset time, it turns the lights on 14 hours prior, and then turns them off at sunrise to conserve power. This way the birds always have the natural fading daylight in the evening to mosey back to the coop, get a bite to eat and get up on the roost with no sudden "lights out". Lights are an LED strip powered by a 6V battery and a small solar panel to trickle charge it during the day.
Will post some pics and results in the next few days.
Up until the end of December I was giving my hens minimal supplemental lighting. I left the coop light on until 6:00, which was an hour and a half of extra light. I was getting, on average, 5 - 7 eggs per day. After Christmas I started leaving the lights on until 8 p.m., which is two hours more than they were getting. I'm now averaging 3 - 5 eggs per day. I realize the hens are still only getting about 12.5 hours of light, so perhaps they do need a full 16 to lay consistently. Maybe the lights have to be on for 16 hours all year round without fail or you throw the system off balance???Seems to be an undecided subject - extra light in the coop. I've decided to give it a try just to see what happens. We've been without eggs now for about 2 months and as much as I enjoy their company, we DID get them for eggs.
I've spent the last week building a microproccessor controlled light system that automatically calculates sunrise and sunset for my LAT/LON. Based on the sunset time, it turns the lights on 14 hours prior, and then turns them off at sunrise to conserve power. This way the birds always have the natural fading daylight in the evening to mosey back to the coop, get a bite to eat and get up on the roost with no sudden "lights out". Lights are an LED strip powered by a 6V battery and a small solar panel to trickle charge it during the day.
Will post some pics and results in the next few days.