I had a downturn in laying in the past few weeks that I attribute to several factors,
Do you have a Southern States in your area? I'm using https://southernstates.com/products...medicated-crumble?_pos=2&_sid=d93060a58&_ss=r which isn't perfect, because it's got bacitracin (which is perfectly safe, just not desirable to me), but it's 21% protein and less expensive than anything other than the cheapest 16% layer so I'm gritting my teeth and tolerating the antibiotic.
If I didn't have enough birds to be going through 50# a week I'd cough up a few more dollars a bag for unmedicated chick feed.
Any feed store *ought* to carry some kind of "All Flock" feed in the 18-22% protein range.
I found this an interesting read. 100 years ago, this book was aimed to help farmers get a then-profitable 100 eggs per hen per year -- from LEGHORNS. The worst bird I've had, a Brahma, did better than that.
Thread 'Poultry for the Farm and Home'
*Gives my 5 broodies an accusatory look*
One of them is back to laying now. Not sure about the others because they all lay very similar eggs.
- Five broodies. That means 5 less eggs per day.
- Repecka getting out. I would not be surprised to stumble across some eggs somewhere at some point. She's repeatedly hidden nests in the coop "clutter". Repecka's Hidden Collection!
That's another missing egg.
- Too many cockerels in the flock. Girls are getting stressed and rooster-worn. Stress reduces laying.
- Black rat snakes. It's the season and there's very little I can do about it but to move snakes to the back of the property when I can catch them.
- The spring hormonal surge is over so some drop is natural.
There are feeds with higher levels of protein, but they seem hard to get a hold of and they're usually only 17-18%.
Do you have a Southern States in your area? I'm using https://southernstates.com/products...medicated-crumble?_pos=2&_sid=d93060a58&_ss=r which isn't perfect, because it's got bacitracin (which is perfectly safe, just not desirable to me), but it's 21% protein and less expensive than anything other than the cheapest 16% layer so I'm gritting my teeth and tolerating the antibiotic.
If I didn't have enough birds to be going through 50# a week I'd cough up a few more dollars a bag for unmedicated chick feed.
Any feed store *ought* to carry some kind of "All Flock" feed in the 18-22% protein range.
I know that before mass-produced chicken feed a lot of people free-ranged their birds and all they ever fed them was a little scratch to bring them home at night. I do think that would be a lot more simple, but I do wonder how many eggs those people were getting.
I found this an interesting read. 100 years ago, this book was aimed to help farmers get a then-profitable 100 eggs per hen per year -- from LEGHORNS. The worst bird I've had, a Brahma, did better than that.
Thread 'Poultry for the Farm and Home'
If 8 hens went broody last week and you've only just broken them, it'll probably be a little while before they start laying again. I'm guessing that's your biggest problem right now
*Gives my 5 broodies an accusatory look*
One of them is back to laying now. Not sure about the others because they all lay very similar eggs.