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if they are molting they will not lay...try putting an egg in there and leaving it in there to encourage them to lay and put a red heat light and leave on for 24/7...they might start laying again...I don't keep my birds longer then a year and a half...they start to loose their ability to lay and the meat is really tough after this point..so keep the fresh birds and you will have plenty off eggs...we picked 14 or 15 eggs today..the birds I choose to keep are the visual keepers the ones that look the best....you can tell when a bird shouldn't be around for egg production or meat in that aspect...hope this helpsI got two hens from guy who was moving. He told me they were 3 years old and laying a dozen eggs per week. Fast forward 6 months...these hens have never laid a single egg. One of them has arthritis and does not get around well. The other one is too old and fat to get down from the roost. I think the hens are closer to 5 or 6 years old and the guy who sold them lied about their age and egg laying status.
In October I bought some 2 year old hens and a rooster. The hens laid for a couple of weeks and then all started molting. They have not laid a single egg in over a month. It seems to be that time of year. I'm hoping they will start to lay again in January. I'd expect yours will do the same. Short day length combined with the stress of moving has probably caused them to quit laying.
I butcher them and eat them..i want the birds to be as productive and at the same time I don't wanna eat rock hard meat...the difference between a one year old to a four year old bird..would just be like cutting a frozen steak...it would not be good and it would be so tough...older birds can produce..just not an egg a day...and when they get older there egg shells are very thin...even with extra calcium as age takes its toll the birds get weaker and it puts more strain on your birds and their organs...its like humans...if humans had a kid a year for twenty years straight there bodies would not be able to handle it and they would become weaker...same concept...you wanna do whats going to get you the most in all aspect...unless you like paying for something to look at...everything in my life has a function and it pays for itself..for example when a birds production slows...so does my slow cooker...and then the younger ones get older and they take there place...there is really no point to have a chicken more then a year...unless your breeding@birdman55 what do you do with them after a year and a half? I wouldn't know where to take them or what to do with them. (if they end up not producing).