- Jul 14, 2010
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Well, when I had chickens, the ladies (and gents) lived out their time in retirement. In truth, they kept right on laying, though eggs came less often. I don't think I ever had one completely quit laying. You'll probably have a % lost every year due to various natural causes. So, by the time they get older, you won't be feeding the entire flock anyway.
Another option would be to pen the older birds that are no longer producing as many eggs (but are semi-pets living out retirement) a cheaper diet. Of course, you'd need to pen them separately.
Honestly? I have quail now, and even the older birds will live out their retirement. They are helping feed me. I'll feed them in return. It's a trade off that I'm happy with. It's worth it to me even if they only produce eggs every 2-3 days (I have one girl that way now -- 1-2 eggs a week.)
Another option would be to pen the older birds that are no longer producing as many eggs (but are semi-pets living out retirement) a cheaper diet. Of course, you'd need to pen them separately.
Honestly? I have quail now, and even the older birds will live out their retirement. They are helping feed me. I'll feed them in return. It's a trade off that I'm happy with. It's worth it to me even if they only produce eggs every 2-3 days (I have one girl that way now -- 1-2 eggs a week.)