What is considered old age for hens?

Most backyard hens hit “old age” around 5 to 7 years. Some can live longer with good care, but you’ll often see a drop in egg production and more health issues starting around year 4 or 5. Breed, diet, and living conditions play a big role too
 
Most backyard hens hit “old age” around 5 to 7 years. Some can live longer with good care, but you’ll often see a drop in egg production and more health issues starting around year 4 or 5. Breed, diet, and living conditions play a big role too
Thank you for the information! I have two 5 year olds. 5 years doesn't seem like a long enough time.
High production breeds lifespan, sadly. Is only 18 months -4 years, approximately. Reproduction issues take them down early.
That's so sad to think their lives are so short. I wanted to start raising some reds to process but they ended up pets 😅
 
Even in people there is considerable variance in lifespans. Nothing is guaranteed. Instead of worrying for what is beyond my control, I concentrate on giving them a good life, and I hope a quick end.

If this is a general question, 3+ is aging IMO. I think these types of posts make people feel guilty when their birds don't live as long as in they did something wrong.
 
Even in people there is considerable variance in lifespans. Nothing is guaranteed. Instead of worrying for what is beyond my control, I concentrate on giving them a good life, and I hope a quick end.

If this is a general question, 3+ is aging IMO. I think these types of posts make people feel guilty when their birds don't live as long as in they did something wrong.
My intention was purely general since a couple of my hens are 5; I wasn't sure what "old age" was considered for chickens.
 

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