I see many places that say hens need 12 to 14 hours of light to lay eggs.
Obviously, that isn't the whole of it because otherwise hens would not lay eggs between September 20th-ish and March 20th-ish, unless one lived very near the equator.
Last time I researched this, I found that hens need 12+ hours of light for full production of eggs. I think I remember 14 to 15 or 16 hours for maximum production but either way, what explains the extra weeks before/after the equinoxes?
It seems, they need about 9 hours for any of them to produce any eggs.
I doubt that is all there is to it. Among other things, some are more sensitive to light levels than others.
Also, how much light is needed to count as those hours?
Is it only the intensity or does wavelength matter?
Do clouds change the intensity and/or wavelength of sunlight?
Edited from simply saying "sorry" as the entire message for hitting the wrong key.
Obviously, that isn't the whole of it because otherwise hens would not lay eggs between September 20th-ish and March 20th-ish, unless one lived very near the equator.
Last time I researched this, I found that hens need 12+ hours of light for full production of eggs. I think I remember 14 to 15 or 16 hours for maximum production but either way, what explains the extra weeks before/after the equinoxes?
It seems, they need about 9 hours for any of them to produce any eggs.
I doubt that is all there is to it. Among other things, some are more sensitive to light levels than others.
Also, how much light is needed to count as those hours?
Is it only the intensity or does wavelength matter?
Do clouds change the intensity and/or wavelength of sunlight?
Edited from simply saying "sorry" as the entire message for hitting the wrong key.

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