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First
Lots of help here.... Just no real answers to "why aren' t they laying.
Chickens don't read our calendar. And they don't answer directly to our questioning. Have you read through this thread for ideas? Internal laying can be a problem , but both at the same time? I doubt that.
Sometimes showing them the stock pot and telling them they are going to find themselves IN IT if they don't lay soon works.
Sometimes changing their feed works. I do know, from personal experience that giving them too many treats causes them to stop laying or lay irregularly. I was getting 3 -4 eggs a day from 4 hens until the rain started and I picked up worms for them ... as a treat. MANY worms. They stopped laying. Never resumed at the rate they were, now they are out free ranging every day. (Now I have one of my daily layers gone broody on me, so I am lucky to get an egg a day. I'm looking for a large stock pot to take down there.
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Sorry, I'm reading my way through all the pages on this thread, so this reply is to this older comment. About those worms. Do you mean earthworms? Ten or so years ago I read a book on chickens written in the thirties, I think it was, and I seem to remember it saying something about earthworms being one of the hosts or something to tapeworms. OK, it was an old book and science may say something else altogether different today. But I did a quick google, and although I've found nothing yet on tapeworms, I did find this interesting link about parasites and pathogens that can infect earthworms:
http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/inhsreports/may-jun00/worms.html
Just something to consider.
First

Lots of help here.... Just no real answers to "why aren' t they laying.
Chickens don't read our calendar. And they don't answer directly to our questioning. Have you read through this thread for ideas? Internal laying can be a problem , but both at the same time? I doubt that.
Sometimes showing them the stock pot and telling them they are going to find themselves IN IT if they don't lay soon works.

Sometimes changing their feed works. I do know, from personal experience that giving them too many treats causes them to stop laying or lay irregularly. I was getting 3 -4 eggs a day from 4 hens until the rain started and I picked up worms for them ... as a treat. MANY worms. They stopped laying. Never resumed at the rate they were, now they are out free ranging every day. (Now I have one of my daily layers gone broody on me, so I am lucky to get an egg a day. I'm looking for a large stock pot to take down there.

Sorry, I'm reading my way through all the pages on this thread, so this reply is to this older comment. About those worms. Do you mean earthworms? Ten or so years ago I read a book on chickens written in the thirties, I think it was, and I seem to remember it saying something about earthworms being one of the hosts or something to tapeworms. OK, it was an old book and science may say something else altogether different today. But I did a quick google, and although I've found nothing yet on tapeworms, I did find this interesting link about parasites and pathogens that can infect earthworms:
http://www.inhs.uiuc.edu/inhsreports/may-jun00/worms.html
Just something to consider.
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