Hi, My 8 chickens are ranging from 12-20 mos. There are 2 Orpingtons, 2 Marans, 1 Austerlorp, 1 Ameracana, 1 Araucana & 1 Faverole. The faverole and younger Marans are brooding (forever on empty boxes-were pretty faithful before 4-5/wk ea) The only hen that is laying regular is the younger orpington. Occasionally the araucana does. They have good quality layer food available at all times and plentiful water (6 scattered) . They get meal worms, garden scraps (tomatoes, watermellon...), some table scraps & run of the back yard. They appear happy and healthy. The older Marans molt re-feathering is taking a long time so she looks less impressive than usual but still almost no eggs all summer. I've looked all over the yard. I don't know what to think. Could the molt be taking all summer for everyone? Also, there are 2 ducks who are very productive but their egg shells have become very thin. I have even stirred oyster shell through their layer feed but it hasn't resolved.
My neighbor got a very loud 4 wheeler he has been working on this summer. Could all that noise be upsetting them so much? The lawn mower and weed eater never bothers them. They act thrilled when I start mowing. I'm puzzled. Am I doing something wrong? Open to input...![]()
Lock them inside the coop for a week. That will tell you if they are laying someplace that you are not finding. Continue to supply extra calcium in a separate container.
(the easist way to break a broody hen is to allow her to sit on a couple of eggs and hatch some chicks. That only takes 21 days, not 5 weeks. No rooster? Ask a friend for a few fertile eggs. Don't want more birds....give the hatchlings back to the person who supplied the eggs after 4 weeks....sooner if the momma looses interest in them)
And yes, the noise could be upsetting them....but not for a whole summer....they should be used to the noise by now.
And no, molt takes a month at the most. So that isn't it.
Since your birds free range they might have worms. Have you wormed them? Since they aren't laying, the egg 'withdrawl' recommended on the bottle isn't really an issue, is it?
None of that worked? Stop giving them ANY treats of ANY kind....just layer feed for 2 - 3 weeks. (I know, it hurts to not feed our babies the good stuff, but you might have to resort to that)
If that works, start adding treats one at a time a few days apart. In doing so I learned that my breed of birds stop laying when I feed them bread. (Go figure, silly birds) Avoid anything that has corn in it...too much corn makes the birds fat and fat hens don't lay well, if at all. And if they start laying do not give them treats daily....you wouldn't give a child candy daily....same goes for chickens