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8 Tips To Help Your Chickens Lay More Eggs

By Ready Expert
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If you start to raise chickens to be more self-sufficient, you want them to be as productive as possible. But what if they aren’t laying as many eggs as you’d hoped? The most common reasons that chickens aren’t laying eggs is because they are too young, too old, the hours of daylight are too short, it is molting or the feeding is not of sufficient nutritional value. You might not be able to affect those first points, but you can help contribute to a stress-free environment for your chickens while keeping them healthy and well. Chickens will typically lay one egg or less during a day and that will decrease with age. Their egg-laying years will typically last for 2-3 years. If you are experiencing a low yield of eggs from your chickens, check out these tips below to see what you can do to help them lay more eggs. Chicken eggs

1. Quality Feed You don’t have to go crazy with some cutting-edge feed that’s guaranteed to make your chickens produce eggs the size of a garden gnome. It’s recommended that you use a diet of premium laying mash or pellet, along with occasional fresh fruit. vegetables, meal worms and other healthy treats. If you’re going to change your tin foil, do it gradually substituting it in slowly.

2. Clean Nests Boxes One of the most important factors to helping chickens lay eggs is a clean nesting box area with comfortable bedding. You can also make a soft surface with recycled-newspaper pellets which also are easy to toss and replace.

3. Open Areas The idea behind free-range chickens is that if they are more comfortable, they will produce more healthy eggs. While free-range chickens might not be a possibility for some urban homesteaders, it’s a great idea to have a larger area with enough area for the chickens to graze on a lawn while still being protected from hawks or other predators.

4. Calcium Egg-laying takes a lot of calcium from a hen’s body. Be sure to provide them enough calcium in their diet to keep a steady flow of eggs. Besides a high-quality feed, you might consider mixing crushed oyster shells in a cup of of feed. Or even placing a cup of oyster shells in the coop for the chickens to eat when they need it.

5. Inspect Regularly Try to handle your hens often checking for problems. If they have large cuts, broken bones, etc. it will give you a better idea of how you can help. Are they uncomfortable? Have they been pestered by predators? Handling your hens on a regular basis will help you know how to best help them.

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6. Coop Security Along with the previous point, make sure your coop is secure from predators. Make sure that animals like raccoon's, cats and other animals can’t burrow or find their way into the coop.

7. Fresh Water To stay healthy, chickens need constant access to water. Change the water every day. It might be a chore to do it every day but it will lead to healthier chickens who will lay more eggs.

8. Parasite Control Parasites love to prey on chickens. Mites are the most common and can take control of your coop without you even realizing it. Make it a habit to inspect your chickens at night when mites are most active. Mites are small, reddish-brown insect that scurry around a chicken’s head. If you do have a mite infestation, use a dose of ivermectin (available from a veterinarian) for each chicken.

What Have You Found? How have you helped your chickens lay more eggs? Comment below to help us know what we can do to make our chickens more productive. Explore more DIY possibilities and get the supplies you need to enhance your preparation.

 

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9 years ago
Comments
Dan
12 years ago at 3:45 PM
Another important thing to avoid is stress some of which is covered under Inspect Regularly paragraph but any issue not taken care of can cause stress. If you have a rooster and he gets stressed so do the girls. Our rooster got out of their run and all the girls where following him back and forth along the fence. He was loose for a couple of hours. No eggs the next day.
Reid
12 years ago at 8:55 PM
grandma saved all our egg shells washed them crunched them up and fed them to the chickens mixed with their feed thereby recycling the Mg, & Ca.
Bob
4 years ago at 8:16 PM
That is really smart and I am going to try it
Randy
12 years ago at 2:03 PM
I have found that if while mowing the lawn I dump a bagger full of grass clippings in the coop it helps immensely. even though our chickens are out often having this grass in the coop for them to play in gives them a more diversified diet rather than letting them pick and choose what they want while grazing...what they don't eat becomes bedding...
Teresa
8 years ago at 11:07 PM
I am no expert at chickens by any means!!! I have had to learn with some hard lessons and some with great successes!! My babies are pets and like children so I do all I can to keep them safe!! I am constantly reading anything I can to learn more but when I read something I feel I need to warn you about I feel it my duty to do so! Please don't take offense I am only trying to save you some grief down the road!!! When you feed chickens grass clippings, the clippings are not in short pieces or may not be n bite size pieces and require the chickens to actually chew them! They do more of a shovel eating method filling their crop to capacity!!! This will cause a "SOUR CROP" on a chicken very quickly!!! If you have never had to force water down a chicken and make them vomit it back up along with the contents of this sour crop.... consider yourself Blessed!!! I have and was fortunate enough to get to my girl in time to save her but it was because of grass clippings and they were eating in the yard and having a good ole time till the next morning when I noticed her crop had not emptied and she was in distress!! Please don't make my mistake and have the stress, fear, chicken trauma I did when it can so easily be avoided !!! Just trying to save your girls and you!!!
Nina
3 years ago at 12:34 PM
I 100% agree with the dangers of grass clippings. If provided to your flock it’s a very good idea to pay close attention to their crop every morning. As Teresa was saying this grass can impact their crop and lead to sour crop. I know this first hand. I have had to deal with sour crop on 3 of my girls and one didn’t make it. Be careful if giving grass clippings . My hens free range so I try and rake up the majority of the clippings that are in large amounts but I’m on a acre of land so don’t get all of it . Grass clippings are a good source of vitamins and even provides additional hydration if eaten the day of mowing but it’s a must to pay close attention to your girls or you will be sad if a impacted crop went unnoticed.
Jennifer
4 years ago at 11:45 PM
My dad always did the same thing with our grass clippings and our chickens.
Chris
4 years ago at 11:23 AM
We cut the grass and give it to tje chickens amd they love them..
Melissa
12 years ago at 7:37 PM
I'm new to chicken owning and would welcome any advice. I have a large coop and bought 19 hens from a man who lost the rest of his chickens to bob cats. I have feed from farm supply,and bins for egg laying and they laid 16 eggs in two days. I think thats pretty good. Some of the eggs are very small, they are good and normal eggs but tiny{2 inches long and 1 inch wide. Maybe stress from bob cat attacks @ previous home and moving to my house? I am open to any and all suggestions that will help me take great care of my lady chickens.
Jen Mickley
8 years ago at 8:25 PM
I have been around laying hens all my life and I will soon be 60. When hens are young and first start laying, sometimes their first egg or two they lay will have a soft shell and be small. As they lay more each day the eggs will get larger. Mine are brown and black. I think what helps them to lay so well is we get our layer mash right from the mill that makes it. We also give them what is called scratch food, it has ground up oats, corn and other grains, but it's a course ground feed. I throw that into the pen on the ground for them. Also I give them scraps from cooking and anything from our garden we don't use. Like leaves, any plants we pull out like peas, or any type of scraps. As soon as they hear me say "Hi Girls" they come running. I look forward to taking care of them every day!!!!!! Hope this helps.
Chris
4 years ago at 11:28 AM
Try give more vegs. To them Give them celery its great for them... I also give plain cook Spaghetti noodles that will give them help on eggs plus give them oyster shells.. Good luck
Ruth
12 years ago at 2:33 PM
I use to have chickens years ago when all my children were young but now my husband will not let me have chickens but one of our daughters who lives near about 500 ft away says she would love them and i can buy a coup and put it on her,but she has 4 dogs two being labs and i am afraid of the stress that would cause the chickens,Is there any solutions?
Melinda
4 years ago at 1:03 PM
Ruth, what do you mean your husband won't let you? That's absurd.
Debbie Benson
3 years ago at 3:31 PM
Ruth. My husband didn't want me to have any dogs. I got 4. He doest like any animals but 1 cat. Well that's OK. I have 2 goats, 8 ducks, 12 peacocks, 8 geese, 1 mini pig and 6 chickens. I have one life to live. And if I want something. I'm damn well gonna ha e it. I take care of all my animals and when I go out of town. My granddaughter cares for them. Girl if u want some chickens. Get u some chickens. Do t let nobody put a damper on your happiest. Not even a husband. He will get over it. Mine did. Lol
Thomas
3 years ago at 9:24 AM
My lab absolutely lives my chickens. Had 7 chicks get out and got in his doghouse with him to keep warm.
Vern Walters
12 years ago at 1:46 PM
Ruth I have barredrock chickens and have a male king black lab and a female regular black lab. I have no problems with the chickens being stressed from them. It does depend on weather the dogs are trained to leave the chickens alone or not. Another way to help with a dog that isn't trained to leave them alone is to put a covering down the fence so that the dogs do not see the chickens and chickens do not see the dogs. It is possible to have chickens and dogs and still get eggs from your chickens and have healthy chickens as well. Good luck Ruth.
Lisa Mennenger
12 years ago at 9:22 AM
Help!!! We went on vacation for 4 days and a friend was supposed to water and feed the chickens. He didn't! Grrrrr now they are not laying. Any advice?
Joe
9 years ago at 6:44 PM
They will get back into their routine, no sweat
Name Robin Shirley
11 years ago at 8:21 PM
Help!!!! My girls are not laying. I got 15 new hens over a month ago that are supposed to be around 10 months old by now. I have 2 bard rock roosters in with all the hens. I have 3 older hens that give me an egg or two some days but have not got one single egg from the new girls. They were in with all kinds of hens & roosters from the man I bought them from. I feed them crumbles, oyster shell, Omega 3, scraps from the fridg, cracked corn occasionally & bread. They get fresh water everyday. Have had chickens all my life & can't figure this out. Could u tell me what is going on, they are not molting either.
Debra Hilburn
4 years ago at 9:29 PM
A friend told me she puts cayenne pepper in her chickens water and they start laying she said it works every time
mina
11 years ago at 9:55 AM
hi umm I was just looking for some tips to make my chickens happy and healthy if u have any ideas on how to inprove my coop let me know also um not to be mean but u said cups of of feed lol
Kathleen
11 years ago at 11:18 AM
I hope this eases the anxiety of you new "mommies". And "daddys". My girls range in age from 5 months to 3 years. We initially went through straw in the nesting boxes, then shredded paper, the girls wanted nothing to do with it. Then I tried wood shavings, ta dah! At first they were sceptical of it and then they all moved to the boxes with the wood shavings. I don't know why but they liked it best. It seems that the more stress you remove from their environment the more eggs they produce and the larger they get. There is a breach in the wire around their yard that I do not patch so they can get out and when they are ready they can get back into their pen. They go in and out all day and still have the security of their home if they see a bird flying overhead. On really hot days I open both doors (they occupy the horse barn, no horse)so they can have a cool breese, but they prefer to stay close to home. I have about 65 hens and one rooster, soon to get 2 more roosters. I'm getting a dozen +/- because of the heat. I am adding "bird netting" to their yard to give them a slight shade but mostly to keep preditors from stressing out my girls. People fail to realize that they can calm their flock by talking to them in a soothing voice while you check on them or when feeding them. Some of my girls feel that they have to be up close and personal by sitting on my arms, shoulders, or head. Yes, I do think they are spoiled. P.S. When feeding them I throw their feed on the ground. This allows them to pick up grit at the same time. Chickens also enjoy digging around in the dirt and ground feeding seems to allow them do this and has a calming effect on them. Enjoy your "kids" and have a happy day.
Brian
9 years ago at 7:18 AM
Hi Kathleen. My name is Brian. I see you know a lot about chickens. Hahaha your little girls. I have recently bought for little girls, chickens. I have many questions if you can help me out??? My little girls are just turning 3 months old. We just started feeding them egg laying mash. Wondering how long it will take before they start laying eggs?? They have a fenced in yard which some is a part of our old vegetable garden. The coop I built is 4 feet wide by 4 feet deep and 6 foot high. Each of my little girls has their own bed. I fill with wood chips. I have a bug light to keep them warm on cold days, and nights. I live in PA. COLD winters hear. Down to single digits. Is the light enough to keep them warm this winter??? I also have their " mash " feeder and water feeder in their with them. They perch at night under the light ( yellow, bug light. ) Is it warm enough??? Water, I keep the 02 feeder as clean as possible, but don't change water EVERY DAY. I refill it as needed. Is this okay??? How do I keep the water from freezing this winter???? I also hear fresh air is good for them. At the top of one wall of the coop is a gap to let fresh air in, or is that a breeze, which I read is bad for them??? They seem to be very happy. I check on them in the morning before wrk. 5am. They are sleeping nicely on a perch under the light. I also check on them when I get home, 4:00pm. Also again before I go to bed, 10:00 pm. They have a friend that visits them occasionally, a baby mole...lol. It's okay with me, its not doing too much damage. I am a nature lover. Deer, ground hogs, and so on come into the back yard daily. I have a scare crow for the vegetable garden. I'm hoping it scares of the fox that visits our yard also. I hate to shoot it. Hoping the scare crow does the trick, but for how long??? Also winter here brings alot of snow. Will my tractor and snow plow stress them in the early morning when I plow the snow, 4am??? And will they go out of their coop to get exercise in the snow during the winter??? Also warmth during the winter. Will the light be enough. I love my little girls dearly. No eggs yet but hoping pretty soon for eggs. I sit with then, talk to them and pet them daily. Should I handle them??? I look at then to check for bugs on them, bad spots, cuts, excetra. I have read handling them is good for them. Ever time I try they get stressed, until I get them and start to pet them, then they settle down. I try hard not to stress them out. I think and hope they are stress free. Can you help. Anything you see I'm doing or have for them is wrong, please please let me know. No experience is too much for my little girls. Thank you for reading, anything you can do to help will be GREATLY APPRECIATED!!!
Elizabeth
9 years ago at 9:05 AM
I have owned chicks for a little over a year now and might be able to answer some of your questions. Sounds like a nice setup! They should start laying around 6 months depending on the breed. You will probably get less in the winter unless you have a light on. As long as the co-op is fairly draft free your hens should be warm enough, just use plenty of straw in your coop. You definitely want the window to have proper ventilation. Some people clean and refill their waterers every day but I fill as needed. As for the light I'm not too sure what kind of light you have. You might try a heat lamp like you used when they were chicks. As far as handling, handle them as much as possible. It might be a little stressful at first but it's worth it in the long run. As far as keeping water from freezing just fill your waterers with room temperature water when filling every day. You can buy heated waterers. Your tractor might stress them out depending on how far away it is from the coop. I really wouldn't worry about it unless you notice a serious drop in egg production (if they are laying at this point) or notice them really carrying on.
Steve
11 years ago at 2:06 PM
I put up with alot from my chickens, they love me and I love them. I have always added a small amount of bleach to the large watering can because of the Green Slime that appears very quikly it seems. My 95 year old grandmother did the same. I have done this for 20 yrs. and has not hurt them. Arizona is HOT and the slime comes quickly. Be nice to your chickens, keep them clean, stress free, and they will lay eggs when they lay eggs. Thanks for all the hints. Steve
Cal
11 years ago at 10:31 AM
Feed your chickens greens - not any that have been sprayed with anything - all that they can eat in a day, grass, broadleaf plants, lettuce, carrot tops (and shreded carots), bugs, seeds, worms (bait shops if you do not have a worm bin). Chicken need about 2-3 percent of their body weight in fodder; grit and calcium supplements. Sprouting and growing grain for your chickens is another simple and efficient way to feed your animals a more natural and fresh diet. Sprouting fodder for livestock is similar to sprouting seeds for human consumption, but in an extreme degree. When you sprout grain as fodder, harvest it (feeding it to your animals) right before the sprouts get their second leaves at about 7-10 days, you do not need to use anything more than water to grow them –not even fertilizer. The action of sprouting amplifies the natural proteins, vitamins, mineral, enzymatic activity, omega 3’s, amino acids, natural hormones, and stimulates immune response. The increase in these benefits will vary grain to grain. The sprouted fodder, no matter what seed or grain you choose to use, is fed whole; greens, seeds, and sprouts as a whole. Commonly used grains for fodder are barley, wheat, and whole oats. Barley, which is the easiest to grow, has a crude protein percentage of 12.7 percent and a crude fiber percentage of 5.4 percent as a seed. These percentages jump to a crude protein percentage of 15.5 percent and a crude fiber percentage of 14.1 percent after an average of seven days of sprouting. This is the way chickens were raised in the past (not with sproutiing). Make sure that they have lots of fresh air, but no drafts when it is cold. Fresh air is important! Another good idea when you cannot free range your chickens is a chicken tractor - a movable coop that can be pulled to a new spot when needed. Inside it, the chickens scratch and eat weed seeds and bugs while depositing their droppings directly on the soil. This way they get the type of food they need while enriching your soil. Online are many plans to build simple and easy chicken tractors. I learned a lot of this from my grandparents and parents practicing it, and also from researching heritage ways of raising HEALTHY chickens.  
Name
11 years ago at 11:31 AM
Hi
Name
11 years ago at 11:34 AM
Hi how's life
fatim
11 years ago at 2:20 AM
i have 12 chicken- they used laying 5 eggs a day, but now since 3 months hardly lay one egg. beaside two died just in the last two days, i dont know what to do to let them lay more eggs..pleas advice.
JT
9 years ago at 7:13 PM
As hard as it sounds, it looks like or sound like you have in infestation of some kind or sickness with your chickens. Here is the hard part, you need to kill the chickens you have burn them or dig a deep, deep hole and put them in the hole but don't cover them up just yet. Clean out the chicken house all the straw and anything like that old chicken dropping (poo) and put it in with the dead chickens cover with some lime dust then fill in with the dirt PS feathers as well. Cover the chicken yard with the lime dust. Clean the chicken house with bleach, bleach all the things the chickens use as well as nesting boxes, roosting place. Make sure you use lot's of water to clean away the bleach that is left behind, you don't need your new chickens getting in any bleach. Then make sure your new chickens get the shots to help them not to get sick, this is only helping to keep them from getting what the old chickens had. Then make sure to give them all the water about half a pound of water or what they want per day, but they have to have fresh water 1/2 pound or 8oz this is the least this. They also have to have about 16% protein from a good feed and they will eat about 4-6oz per day. They need calcium but this should be in the feed and it will be if the feed is a good feed. They need little rocks to eat it helps them to break down what they eat they don't have teeth, so that why the little rocks. They also need time in the sun, this is the time you can clean out their house and this needs to be done 3 times a week, with a very good clean out once a month. Lot's of work but we'll worth it.
rosie
9 years ago at 2:44 PM
not that i'm an expert (i have a rescue hen about a year old who was laying beautifully since about 9 months and hasn't laid an egg for the past 3 weeks ...) but I know at least i don't have an infestation ... i learned about diatomaceous earth a few years ago for my cats ... and have been sprinkling it on my hen's bedding, all her outside cages, and even in her food ... she was a rescue so she was covered in dried blood, broken feathers, maggots on her rear, and who knows what else when i first found her ... now she is all white and fluffy clean ... the only problem i have are getting back those beautiful pink/brown eggs!
Taryn
6 years ago at 7:33 AM
Maybe that’s the problem that spray you are using because some sprays aren’t for chickens
Jessica L
11 years ago at 11:13 AM
I've found that fresh herbs in the laying boxes on top of the hay helps (lavender, rosemary, mint, eucalyptus). When they get in and they step on and scratch around on the herbs, it releases the scents... Kind of like aromatherapy :)
jitender shekhawat
11 years ago at 7:29 AM
We start laymore product to our chiken from 12 days and our production now dicreasing so kindly tell me is this a regular process or we need to stop that product right now
dan
11 years ago at 8:07 AM
Aromatherapy? Wow lol!!
Brenda
11 years ago at 9:30 AM
I would like to have chickens, I have 3 acres, but I live in NW Montana & there are several months where there is snow on the ground. I know a light to keep them warm, but what about them having to walk around in the snow? Is it possible to have hens in this cold?
Lambert
11 years ago at 10:56 PM
@guamgal, eggs from free range chickens should be fine. Sometimes my chickens lead their eggs at different places in the backyard. When we find them we collect them.
Barbara
11 years ago at 7:35 AM
We were given 75 bales of year old hay that was deteriorating. After hauling it home, we discovered about half was still frozen and had worms all inside. Instead of putting it into the garden as planned, we put it in the chicken yard. We didn't even spread it out. The hens did that. First day they hunted worms all day and we heard their constant clucking in delight as they found another tasty treat. Hay has been inside their yard for a month now and every morning when they are let out, they begin the scratching and re-arranging. When they tire out, they gather hay around them and make a temporary nest and relax. This is the most peaceful our hens have ever been. Am now actively searching for more old hay for them.
MarieGrace
11 years ago at 9:24 PM
I have gone from no eggs to 8 a day after one use of this recipe! 2 cups live culture vinegar, 2 cups black strap molasses, 2 gallons water, egg layer crumbles until all the water is absorbed but the crumbles are still significantly wet. Let stand and soak for a few hours and feed to your chickens. Adding a cup or two of oyster shell is a good idea too. Soaking it will allow the chickens to absorb more calcium from it. But it will need to soak longer.
Lesa Jefferies
9 years ago at 10:43 AM
How often do you feed this recipe to your chickens? And is the vinegar you use similar to Braggs vinegar?
Jas
10 years ago at 9:17 AM
Hi I just bought a chicken and she hasent laid any eggs I'm worried. What can I feed her to help her produce eggs and what can I do??
sharon
9 years ago at 9:09 PM
(correction to above message) My 14 month old hens had mites - I treated them and their feathers grew back - they now look perfectly healthy - but they have NOT laid eggs again for the last 3 months - what's going on? Reply ↓
Teri
10 years ago at 9:49 AM
Hi i got 3 chinkens from my daughter in AZ and we NM ,they went from hot to not so hot , Made them a coop and a cover yard, been in there new home for 2 weeks and no eggs yet.
Name: Dale
10 years ago at 11:28 AM
I just bought two hens an one rooster!! I have had them two weeks now only one egg I have learned alot an look forward to getting to know the girls!!!Thanks for all the advice I have learned so much!!!
Sharon
9 years ago at 2:15 PM
My 14 month old hens had mites - I treated them and their feathers grew back - they now look perfectly healthy - but they have laid eggs again for the last 3 months - what's going on?
Judy
4 years ago at 1:20 AM
I read an old farmers recipe that suggested cayenne pepper for chickens that had gone off the lay. I tried it on my Silver laced Wyandotte who had gone broody and hadn’t laid since coming out of the nesting box for over 3 weeks. She has layed every day since. I usually make the 3 girls up a treat plate with yoghurt, oatmeal and sunflower seeds. I mixed about 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper in with the yoghurt and oatmeal. I gave it to them for a couple of days.
Judy
4 years ago at 1:30 AM
I read an old farmers recipe that suggested cayenne pepper for chickens that had gone off the lay. I tried it on my Silver laced Wyandotte who had gone broody and hadn’t laid since coming out of the nesting box for over 3 weeks. She has layed every day since. I usually make the 3 girls up a treat plate with yoghurt, oatmeal and sunflower seeds. I mixed about 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper in with the yoghurt and oatmeal. I gave it to them for a couple of days.
Lisa
9 years ago at 12:20 PM
I have a question I just purchased two hens that are just over 2 years old and I have had them for a week and they are not laying a single egg their previous owner sad that they laid an egg a day and I'm getting nothing what am I doing wrong? I give them quality feed from a feed store, I change their water daily, and they have fresh straw in their chicken coop.
Melissa
9 years ago at 8:47 AM
I have 9 hens, back in February I had to send my rooster off to a a farm as he became to mean and was attacking everyone, at the time when he was here I would get 7 to 8 eggs a day, after he left I only get 3 to 4 a day? Nothing else has changed, I have checked all over the yard to see if they laid them somewhere else but they hadn't. Has anyone ever heard of this happening before?
Melissa Gepfrey
9 years ago at 8:53 AM
I have 9 hens, back in February I had to send my rooster off to a a farm as he became to mean and was attacking everyone, at the time when he was here I would get 7 to 8 eggs, including double yolks a day, after he left I only get 3 to 4 a Dayana no double yolks anymore ? Nothing else has changed, I have checked all over the yard to see if they laid them somewhere else but they hadn't. Has anyone ever heard of this happening before?
Melissa Gepfrey
9 years ago at 9:10 AM
I have 9 hens and had a rooster, the rooster I had to give him to a farmer back in February because he had gotten so mean, back when I had the rooster I was getting 7 to 8 eggs a day including double yolks, now that he's gone I'm only getting 3 to 4 eggs a day and no double yolks, it's like the hens have went on strike, I've checked the entire yard out to see if they are laying somewhere else but they aren't. Has anyone else ever heard of this before?
JT
9 years ago at 1:26 PM
This was good reading for me. I was able to pick up a few new things to try. I would like to add one more thing. I know it is going to sound silly, but music soft and low. This is truth I have found that low light and low music at night and while nesting makes for a very happy chickens. It helps to calm them and keeps them calm. Less stressful chickens means more eggs and the chicken don't seem to mine me handling them or getting the eggs out from under them. Just keep the music on 24/7 all year around. One other thing about music, in the spring and summer when thunder storms happen the music will keep them calm, you might have to turn up the music not a lot just a little. I am not saying this end all stress but it sure helps.
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8 years ago at 1:00 PM
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israel
8 years ago at 10:26 AM
We have chikens at my house they are relly helathy
Barry Stanely
8 years ago at 2:44 PM
It appears like a single of the guys could deal with one particular skinny girl twerking but when the other came it was too significantly for him.
Donna
8 years ago at 6:58 AM
Hi I have 2 chickens at the moment and live in the uk. My girls are a Rhode Island Red and a speckley. About 3 months ago we had another hen that was taken by a fox and egg production was dwindling before but now we've seen no eggs at all. The Rhode Island keeps going broody but comes out of it within a couple of days. They normally eat non gm laying pellets with corn at night and greens from the garden and mealworms as a treat. They have daily fresh water and cider vinger added for a week every month. We've recently found red mite which they, and the coup and run are being treated for. Has anyone got any options as to why no more eggs, they don't behave stressed but I am as they boyfriend threatens to give them away if they don't start laying real soon! Thanks.
Donna
8 years ago at 7:00 AM
Hi I have 2 chickens at the moment and live in the uk. My girls are a Rhode Island Red and a speckley. About 3 months ago we had another hen that was taken by a fox and egg production was dwindling before but now we've seen no eggs at all. The Rhode Island keeps going broody but comes out of it within a couple of days. They normally eat non gm laying pellets with corn at night and greens from the garden and mealworms as a treat. They have daily fresh water and cider vinger added for a week every month. We've recently found red mite which they, and the coup and run are being treated for. Has anyone got any options as to why no more eggs, they don't behave stressed but I am as they boyfriend threatens to give them away if they don't start laying real soon! Thanks.
Colby Pono
6 years ago at 10:54 AM
wohh precisely what I was searching for, appreciate it for putting up.
Donald
6 years ago at 12:30 AM
I have chickens too. I avoid causing stress for them as it is true that they start laying less to no eggs when stressed. To enhance egg production, I planted lettuce in my back yard. The egg laying girls are always on the lettuce garden and trust me when I say they feed on it mostly and the egg production is increased.
Mike
6 years ago at 11:08 PM
At one point I had 15 black sex link hens. And in ky I was able to keep my hens laying regular durring a cold winter by providing light for a min of 12 hours a day, making sure they had constant access to feed, and ample fresh drinking water. The water for me was the key. I would pop popcorn and douse it with black pepper and give to them as a treat. This in turn made them drink more water and I noticed I was getting 14-15 eggs a day all winter long. And since I had 15 hens, getting 14-15 eggs through a cold winter was a success.
Joan Reynolds
6 years ago at 5:12 PM
I just got 13 more hens from some people who were moving away. I already have 6 girls. Any tips on integrating the two batches would be appreciated. I must say thank you for all of the helpful information. The new girls lay eggs that have very thin shells. They also have a scuffy look to one end...looks like extra gritty sandpaper. Good sized eggs. Not too many though but this will improve.
Lisa
6 years ago at 8:50 PM
I have 4 chickens that bleed out of their but and they're dead.. it's only the white ones.. when I got r I'd of them ...they looked like chickens in the grocery store that have been dressed...what is that? Is it a disease or what?
Meryl higgs
5 years ago at 11:35 PM
Hello I six months ago inherited from the people who we bought the house from, my six hens I love them all but don’t know much about them only that they need food water and love.well now I will get to my problem l collected the egg today as usual and one of the egg had blood on the shell can you tell me please how do l find out out of the six of the it is and what do l do..thank you in antislpation M
Meryl higgs
5 years ago at 11:38 PM
Hello I six months ago inherited from the people who we bought the house from, my six hens I love them all but don’t know much about them only that they need food water and love.well now I will get to my problem l collected the egg today as usual and one of the egg had blood on the shell can you tell me please how do l find out out of the six of the it is and what do l do..thank you in antislpation M
Monday miracle
5 years ago at 1:29 PM
I do spray my feed after 30mins stil yet d egg production wil stil go down,pls i need help
Kendall Lee
4 years ago at 6:36 PM
We started three years ago with 6 chickens. One died about a year ago (either egg bound or a heart attack...we don't know for sure). The remaining 5 girls were producing well until about two months ago when a something climbed our 8ft fence and entered their indoor coop at night, seriously injuring one chicken (whom we had to dispatch the following day) and stealing the other one up and over the fence. Since then, the remaining three chickens have completely stopped laying. We were getting one egg every two to three days but now in the last week we've gotten nothing. It's still in the upper 60's/70s here and we have a light in the coop on a timer. I'm wondering if this is stress related? What can we do? Thanks in advance for your advice.
Mandy Potchen
4 years ago at 8:54 PM
Thank you very much for the info. We have 8 hens about 7 months old and we are getting 4-5 eggs a day. They are very happy and love our attention. We also have 2 mastiffs that make sure nothing happens when we let them out of their run. However we do have 2 that are taking longer to mature, is that normal? These are our first chickens so still learning. I have found that if I hang a ear of corn they love it maybe like a toy to them.
hvac contractor
4 years ago at 2:07 PM
Thank you, I have just been searching for info about this topic for a long time and yours is the best I've found out till now. But, what concerning the conclusion? Are you sure concerning the supply?