Interesting point!if you can stand the smell

I as an omni... actually don't like eggs that much... and especially the smell of them BROWNING.

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Interesting point!if you can stand the smell
We feed ours to our dogs, or give them to the neighbors. My wife is vegan as well so eating those eggs isn't high on our list.I know this my seem like a crazy question but I can not find anything to help me. How many days afther my my hens lay there eggs should I leave them in the coop? I have silkies and we are vegan..... I really just want to raise a army of silkies and would like it to be done in the most "natural" way possible. I have two hens and one rooster. Help please
We remove eggs every day and hens still go broody. In fact if not broken some will continue to set on nothing. One hen set on nothing for several weeks early in our adventure with chickens. We finally broke her but realized our mistake. When setting they eat less and this one apparently wasn't getting up to eat at all, almost lost her.I have never had a hen go broody without eggs present. it will not hurt anything to leave the eggs and let them build up a little pile. just mark them so you know how old they are. if eggs are still being deposited after your hen goes broody then you will need to remove the new unmarked eggs
Sorry, don't mean to make assumptions...some people are just lucky though,
Eggs form in the body of the hens in sets. These are called a clutch. If she is going to go broody (as a silkie this is quite likely) it will be after she lays the last egg in that clutch.Okay so if they don't sit on the eggs right after laying then they won't be broody with that egg?
I found this one of the best discussion on the web regarding using broody hens. http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2013/08/caring-for-broody-hens-facilitating-egg/I know this my seem like a crazy question but I can not find anything to help me. How many days afther my my hens lay there eggs should I leave them in the coop? I have silkies and we are vegan..... I really just want to raise a army of silkies and would like it to be done in the most "natural" way possible. I have two hens and one rooster. Help please
We kept chickens as you do for about 5 years. Then a neighbor had a visitor with dogs. We asked that the dogs be kept tied up. But the people decided to let them run. It was during a storm so we didn't hear the carnage. In less than 1 hour they killed 30 chickens. After that we got an electric netting fence. We had no more dog attacks and the occasional fox attacks stopped. You never know when your luck might run out. I wish we could still do ours the way you are doing, but the peace of mind our fence brings us is worth it and has prevented land based attacks for 15 years now.@EggSighted4Life to each there own but please dont make assumptions, I live on 15 acres in the middle of the missouri ozarks surrounded by several hundred acres of forrest, I have many predators that would love to get at my eggs/chickens but i take my role as protector of the flock very seriously. I have 4 dogs and 3 cats that protect my flock. I can and do leave my eggs for a couple weeks and not have any issues at all.
some people are just lucky though, I dont use nest boxes or even lock my chickens up at night either. they live in a run that is made with concrete blocks, a 2x 4 roof and the front door is left open 24 hours a day. the only problem I ever had was a black australorp that nested on the ground one night and got attacked but not killed.
I only have 19 years of chicken experience though..
I suspect however you are the exception to the rule and exceptions often eventually fail. I never had any problem growing corn and after 20 years I had raccoons decimate my whole stand overnight. I had raccoons around all that time. Corn is one thing, losing 30 chickens as we did in one hour is another. If people want to take their chances the can, but new people should be aware that the dangers are out there. Been doing chicken raising for over 20 years and I find that you can expect that the unexpected will very likely happen eventually. Never had weasels and then one night a weasel wiped out a whole clutch of chicks. Our dog killed it the next day. Never had a weasel attack again. But I know people who have been wiped out over and over by them. We still lose chickens from one thing or another but we try now to anticipate and protect against those things that haven't happened but could.I do a lot of things people say not to do and have great results. You should read as many points of view as you can find then trust your instincts and do what feels right for you. Not everyone can be like me and have coyotes, foxes, bobcats, raccoons, bears, etc.. running around and never have a loss. I happen to be able to grow great gardens without deer getting into them too lol I'm just lucky. The things you read here shouldn't be taken as absolute truths, not every method works for every person. to the OP good luck on your journey