When Do Hens Start Laying?/Share Your Laying Experiences

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Rachel. Always nice to have people from the far opposite side of the planet! And down there you have the ORIGINAL Black Australorps
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As many have said, when they lay depends on, well everything. Expect NOTHING until 16 weeks at the VERY earliest. 20 to 24 is most common. The percentage I show below is the percentage of days a bird has laid since laying it's first egg including "time off" for moult and lack of winter sun.
- The first of mine to lay was a Faverolles at 19 weeks. Laid 3 eggs in 9 days then not another for 3 more weeks. The other Faverolles laid her first egg at 23 weeks but was steady from that time on. These 2 girls go broody A LOT and have only 32% and 44% laying percentage.
- The 2 Anconas started at 21 weeks, steady from the start. Have never gone broody but took off a LONG time after moult and have laid ~47%.
- The 2 Cubalayas at 21 and 22 weeks, also steady until moult, though SMALL eggs! They were peewees for months, but given the birds are 2/3 the size of regular LF, not surprising. Though, after moulting last fall and starting to lay again in late February, they are laying at the mid to upper end of USDA small, same as the Faverolles and Chantecler. They are more "yard art" than layers and have laid 20% and 28%. Same issue with LONG time off for moult and winter lack of sun.
- One Black Australorp at 22 weeks. She is Super Echo.
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She has laid 61%. She didn't moult until near the end of January and only took off 2 months. Most of the girls that moulted in the fall just went into "less light, no lay" winter mode. The other BA didn't start until she was 33 weeks. She has also always been larger than Echo. She was doing SUPER well until she moulted in September and didn't start again until mid February with the exception of 4 eggs in 12 days mid November. But she is cranking them out now. And she lays BIG eggs. Never smaller than mid range USAD Large (58g to 64g), usually USDA XL and frequently larger, the biggest was 104g. The big ones are always double yolks.
- The first Easter Egger started at 22 weeks, the other not until 30 weeks. But the second has been my second best layer at 58%.
- One Partridge Chantecler started at 22 weeks, the other not until after the second B.A. at 34 weeks. But, if she didn't have a habit of going broody, she would be way up there. Even with having to be broken (no rooster, no fertilized eggs) several times and many weeks off each time, plus moult, she is at 54%, laying 5 or 6 eggs a week, usually 48 to 50 grams so not quite USDA medium. AND she laid right through the winter, none of the other birds did.

With regard to knowing when they are getting close to laying:
Their comb will start to get red. CLEARLY very red, not just a little darker pink. About 2 weeks after that they will probably squat. All you have to do is pass your hand a few inches (cms in Oz
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) over their back and they will go down and flatten out as if something was actually forcing them down. Really funny. Sometimes they will squat if you even move toward them.

Bruce

Thanks. This was very helpful. I'll have to save this somewhere for future reference.
 
4 to 6 months until eggs start to show up is pretty common but it depends a lot on the breed. Cute names.:D
 
I have two hens who both started laying within a couple of days of each other - both at five months! I wasn't expecting it because I had also read it would be closer to six months that they would start laying. One is a Silver Laced Wyandotte, and the other is a Dominique. I have been (almost) consistently getting an egg a day from both of them - again, total surprise because I had read that I would only get about four eggs per week from those two breeds.

My chickens are free-range around my little backyard, and I feed them organic feed and organic scratch as a treat. They also like to scratch around in the compost bin and pick out the good stuff (watermelon seems to be their favorite). Not sure if their organic diet has much to do with the quantity of eggs I'm getting, but it seems to be working well, so I'm sticking to it. :)

I just added two chicks to the flock - a Rhode Island Red and a Ameraucana. They're about 2-1/2 months old now so hoping they start laying at in a few months too.

Good luck with your flock - This site is an awesome resource for new chicken owners!

-Sunnie
 
I recently contacted the woman who sold me the chicks and, though she was unable to remember the breed for some reason, she actually told me they're a week older than I thought they were. I'm such a great chick mother.

Anyway, instead of them being the beautiful little four week old babies I thought they were, they're actually five weeks old tomorrow on the 6th!

They're getting very big though, and they're developing more colour; Beatrice is almost a complete golden-red, while Keisha and Mackenzie have some hints of brown on their feathers.

Also, I've been thinking of getting two one-day old chicks from the pet shop down the road, since I suspect two of my three existing chicks are roosters. I just wasn't sure how to integrate the existing chicks I have with the new ones.

I read that letting them see eachother a few minutes a day each from their own cages side-by-side would help them become aware of one another but I want to do what's best for them. Any ideas?

Thanks, Rachel.
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Wow, that's extremely unlucky. 16 roosters is a lot. Did you keep them all? That'd be extremely hard to handle, I can imagine. I won't, unfortunately, be able to keep a roo if one turns out to be one.

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I kept them all until almost a month ago..I kept 2- a black and a blue partridge-- I traded one of the blue partridges for 2 grey pullets and the rest I sent to a friend that has 40 hens and no roos..It was a nightmare around here..I wasnt set up to separate them, and only had 3 adult hens, one of which has a bonded roo who is VERY protective over her..so you can imagine how hard it was to keep the boys from tormenting the 2 remaining girls.. not to mention the constant crowing wars and the boys all practice breeding each other.. But no one had to get eaten, so overall I am happy
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Unless your 5 week old chicks are large, they should do okay with the new ones. I have 1 month old, 2week old and 1 week old chicks in same brooder pen. They get along well.
 
Seemed like a good year for silkie roos. I got five straight run chicks and got five roos. A friend bought 12 and ended up with 10 roos. Another one got a dozen and all twelve were roosters. Seems the odds are in favor of boys when it comes to them.
 
Seemed like a good year for silkie roos. I got five straight run chicks and got five roos. A friend bought 12 and ended up with 10 roos. Another one got a dozen and all twelve were roosters. Seems the odds are in favor of boys when it comes to them.
I heard that incubation temp plays a factor in determining what sex you get more of.. I am hatching my first incubator full (due in about 6 days )-- Also with the birds that I bought last spring..the hens turned out to be much better quality than the roos..I dont know what, if anything, that has to do with anything..lol.. I did buy from a private breeder and picked out my chicks,so I guess I should have picked better..lol
 
I heard that incubation temp plays a factor in determining what sex you get more of.. I am hatching my first incubator full (due in about 6 days )-- Also with the birds that I bought last spring..the hens turned out to be much better quality than the roos..I dont know what, if anything, that has to do with anything..lol.. I did buy from a private breeder and picked out my chicks,so I guess I should have picked better.


Gender, of course is determined at fertilization. However, I have heard that incubating at slightly cooler temps favors survival of the female embryos and that the roos just don't develop. We'll see, I am a couple days from a hatch incubated at 100 degrees. 21 eggs started in this batch, 6 never developed. We'll see if I have 50/50 hens vs roos.
 

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