Quote:
I can hook you up with Blue Laced Red Wyandottes late winter/early spring!![]()
I'll take some too!! How early can you sex them? I don't want cockerals![]()
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Quote:
I can hook you up with Blue Laced Red Wyandottes late winter/early spring!![]()
I'll take some too!! How early can you sex them? I don't want cockerals![]()
Bleh. I'm so fickle!!!! I still can't decide on supplemental lighting this winter. All my girls are first year pullets but I'm so worried that if I don't supplement that we'll be feeding 11 chickens all winter and still buying eggs. We go through 3.5 dozen eggs a week on average. Right now, that's what we're getting from 7 confirmed layers and 2 that may or may not be laying sporadically, though I don't think they've started at all. I just worry that my poor 14 week olds will technically reach laying age at the end of October and won't actually start due to lack of light until March when they're 8-9 months old! That would royally suck. SOOOO, this is for those on the wet and icky side: DO YOU USE SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHTING? If not, do your first year pullets still lay reliably during the winter as long as they aren't molting?
Quote:
I can hook you up with Blue Laced Red Wyandottes late winter/early spring!![]()
I'll take some too!! How early can you sex them? I don't want cockerals![]()
Wyandottes are harder to sex with their rose combs for sure. Definently takes longer than single comb birds. I usually have good guesses by 8 wks, just by posture, legs, attitude, but I've been fooled before, it's usually around 14 wks before I know for sure. Ameraucana's are hard too with their pea combs.
Yes, we use supplemental lighting in almost all the coops. And watch, as the days get longer, you will notice a slow down in eggs. And yes, your 14 wks old may very well hold out till spring if you don't provide light. We have ours set up on timer's, and I was just telling DH he needs to get them set up this weekend. It will only be a couple of weeks before the daylight is too short!
Bleh. I'm so fickle!!!! I still can't decide on supplemental lighting this winter. All my girls are first year pullets but I'm so worried that if I don't supplement that we'll be feeding 11 chickens all winter and still buying eggs. We go through 3.5 dozen eggs a week on average. Right now, that's what we're getting from 7 confirmed layers and 2 that may or may not be laying sporadically, though I don't think they've started at all. I just worry that my poor 14 week olds will technically reach laying age at the end of October and won't actually start due to lack of light until March when they're 8-9 months old! That would royally suck. SOOOO, this is for those on the wet and icky side: DO YOU USE SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHTING? If not, do your first year pullets still lay reliably during the winter as long as they aren't molting?
Bleh. I'm so fickle!!!! I still can't decide on supplemental lighting this winter. All my girls are first year pullets but I'm so worried that if I don't supplement that we'll be feeding 11 chickens all winter and still buying eggs. We go through 3.5 dozen eggs a week on average. Right now, that's what we're getting from 7 confirmed layers and 2 that may or may not be laying sporadically, though I don't think they've started at all. I just worry that my poor 14 week olds will technically reach laying age at the end of October and won't actually start due to lack of light until March when they're 8-9 months old! That would royally suck. SOOOO, this is for those on the wet and icky side: DO YOU USE SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHTING? If not, do your first year pullets still lay reliably during the winter as long as they aren't molting?
Yes, we use supplemental lighting in almost all the coops. And watch, as the days get longer, you will notice a slow down in eggs. And yes, your 14 wks old may very well hold out till spring if you don't provide light. We have ours set up on timer's, and I was just telling DH he needs to get them set up this weekend. It will only be a couple of weeks before the daylight is too short!
Bleh. I'm so fickle!!!! I still can't decide on supplemental lighting this winter. All my girls are first year pullets but I'm so worried that if I don't supplement that we'll be feeding 11 chickens all winter and still buying eggs. We go through 3.5 dozen eggs a week on average. Right now, that's what we're getting from 7 confirmed layers and 2 that may or may not be laying sporadically, though I don't think they've started at all. I just worry that my poor 14 week olds will technically reach laying age at the end of October and won't actually start due to lack of light until March when they're 8-9 months old! That would royally suck. SOOOO, this is for those on the wet and icky side: DO YOU USE SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHTING? If not, do your first year pullets still lay reliably during the winter as long as they aren't molting?
I live on the dry and nifty side, and I have lights in my coop.
Well I'm not from either side of WA but I ran an experiment last winter on natural light and egg production. I use no artificial light or heat in my coop here in Mich. I used my flock of 6 hens as my control group. They were all laying by Thanksgiving so I began the analysis on December 1 and compared egg output to number of hours of natural daylight.Bleh. I'm so fickle!!!! I still can't decide on supplemental lighting this winter. All my girls are first year pullets but I'm so worried that if I don't supplement that we'll be feeding 11 chickens all winter and still buying eggs. We go through 3.5 dozen eggs a week on average. Right now, that's what we're getting from 7 confirmed layers and 2 that may or may not be laying sporadically, though I don't think they've started at all. I just worry that my poor 14 week olds will technically reach laying age at the end of October and won't actually start due to lack of light until March when they're 8-9 months old! That would royally suck. SOOOO, this is for those on the wet and icky side: DO YOU USE SUPPLEMENTAL LIGHTING? If not, do your first year pullets still lay reliably during the winter as long as they aren't molting?