- Sep 29, 2012
- 3
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I have read through a lot of your posts and I am trying many of the suggestions I just thought I would ask for a few more specifics. I'm sorry this is going to get long...
We are renting a house near Jacksonville, FL that came with chickens. At this time we have 17 hens and one rooster (I think) I don't know what kinds but there are many different colors. I'm sorry I can't be more specific. I don't think the oldest chickens are three yet and some are younger.
We are renting from friends who moved and took some of the flock and left the rest for us. We started with almost 40. A few have gone over the fence to the front yard and the dogs got them. We try to discourage this but it doesn't happen often. When we moved in they were laying 8-9 eggs per day. Then Tropical Storm Debbie came through. That was the end of June. So about that time the days started getting shorter. However not that short. Further this seemed to send them into a molt as there were soon feathers everywhere. I understand both stress and the days could be the cause. However it is now late September and we still have no eggs.
Now we have lost a handful of chickens twice this summer to some unknown chicken plague. After TS Debbie and another storm later this summer with DAYS of rain we had weird chickens walking around. We would go in the yard and make sure that all standing water was dumped and we separated the sick chickens. They almost all died if they got sick. Only one of the others who got sick then got better and joined the flock again. They seemed to have a neurological issue and would die within about a day.
They were laying when there were 40 of them, so I believe there is room for them. There is a nice coop and run and the owners left the run open most of the time for them to free range so we do as well. We have a security system and I have gone back and looked and there don't seem to be any animals attacking them or the eggs.
I have installed a timer and a light to increase the days. I looked up our day lengths and sunrise times with the USNO. Florida has a much smaller difference in day length. We don't ever get below about 10 hours a day, but it also means that we don't get much over 14 hours in the summer. So almost as soon as the days start to get shorter they drop below 14 hours. How long after you start lengthening the days should I see results? (If I'm going to)
I have cleaned the coop every time there is a plague. I have Layer crumbles food and oyster shells out in separate feeders. This is what they were eating when we moved in. It was hot, there was a molt, there were storms, there was a sickness, but at this point I seem to have them all healthy and happy other than they don't want to lay eggs. It hurts my feelings every time I buy eggs at the store.
Any other tricks or ideas? I have looked over every inch of the yard they aren't laying somewhere else. I heard putting golf balls or eggs into a nesting box to make them "envious" of someone else's eggs works. Any thing else you recommend?
Thanks for your help. I thought this was really cool when our friends started it. Overall I enjoy the chickens and I enjoy watching them. I just wish they would lay eggs. I would like to do more but I don't want to add more chickens back in till I have some of this under control, and I'm sure they are happy and healthy.
Thanks
We are renting a house near Jacksonville, FL that came with chickens. At this time we have 17 hens and one rooster (I think) I don't know what kinds but there are many different colors. I'm sorry I can't be more specific. I don't think the oldest chickens are three yet and some are younger.
We are renting from friends who moved and took some of the flock and left the rest for us. We started with almost 40. A few have gone over the fence to the front yard and the dogs got them. We try to discourage this but it doesn't happen often. When we moved in they were laying 8-9 eggs per day. Then Tropical Storm Debbie came through. That was the end of June. So about that time the days started getting shorter. However not that short. Further this seemed to send them into a molt as there were soon feathers everywhere. I understand both stress and the days could be the cause. However it is now late September and we still have no eggs.
Now we have lost a handful of chickens twice this summer to some unknown chicken plague. After TS Debbie and another storm later this summer with DAYS of rain we had weird chickens walking around. We would go in the yard and make sure that all standing water was dumped and we separated the sick chickens. They almost all died if they got sick. Only one of the others who got sick then got better and joined the flock again. They seemed to have a neurological issue and would die within about a day.
They were laying when there were 40 of them, so I believe there is room for them. There is a nice coop and run and the owners left the run open most of the time for them to free range so we do as well. We have a security system and I have gone back and looked and there don't seem to be any animals attacking them or the eggs.
I have installed a timer and a light to increase the days. I looked up our day lengths and sunrise times with the USNO. Florida has a much smaller difference in day length. We don't ever get below about 10 hours a day, but it also means that we don't get much over 14 hours in the summer. So almost as soon as the days start to get shorter they drop below 14 hours. How long after you start lengthening the days should I see results? (If I'm going to)
I have cleaned the coop every time there is a plague. I have Layer crumbles food and oyster shells out in separate feeders. This is what they were eating when we moved in. It was hot, there was a molt, there were storms, there was a sickness, but at this point I seem to have them all healthy and happy other than they don't want to lay eggs. It hurts my feelings every time I buy eggs at the store.
Any other tricks or ideas? I have looked over every inch of the yard they aren't laying somewhere else. I heard putting golf balls or eggs into a nesting box to make them "envious" of someone else's eggs works. Any thing else you recommend?
Thanks for your help. I thought this was really cool when our friends started it. Overall I enjoy the chickens and I enjoy watching them. I just wish they would lay eggs. I would like to do more but I don't want to add more chickens back in till I have some of this under control, and I'm sure they are happy and healthy.
Thanks