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Could stress have stopped their laying?

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It occurred to me that this blip in laying sort of coincided with me putting a tyre in their run for a dustbath. I removed it yesterday as they didn't seem to be getting used to it at all and were avoiding a third of the run :roll: .

 

Reading on the internet that stress can affect laying, I'm waiting with interest to see if egg production gets back on track (and will feel :oops: and :? if it does :( ).

 

(Not started the Zolcal D yet as it hasn't arrived.)

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I had 2 eggs yesterday which is most unusual from my 7 - coincided with a possible fox visit 3 or so mornings ago so I think this was the cause. Yep stress definately does it (oh and girls were safely locked up in their secure run but could see the fox (if it was one) outside - they gave the neighbours a very loud dawn chorus - only way we knew!).

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Hi ANH re stress & eggs, I would confirm that stress has a huge impact on egg production :!: After the mink incident neither of ours laid for ages - it might even have been a couple of weeks or more. And after Sparky had a go at them Penny didn't lay for months :!: High stress - low eggs :!: Ax

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I'm interested to see that quite a few people's chooks seem to be laying less, looking at a couple of the Omlet forums. My five girls are down to 2-3 eggs a day, just when I thought they'd be picking up after the winter drop.

I'm worming them, giving them extra limestone flour (quite a few are softies), withholding treats etc, but so far, no improvement - we're only on Day 3 of the worming, so maybe it's a bit early to expect much?

 

It's really useful to read about it here, and I'll just hang in there for now and see how it goes. They seem quite perky and cheerful, except when they're laying a softie.

 

Egluntine, if you read this, by the way, I wanted to ask where you get the Vit D3 supplement from that you mentioned somewhere - you recommended giving it alongside extra calcium?

 

ANH I hope your girls get laying again soon. I've started closing the Cube door at night, so that they don't disturb my neighbours with their bok-bokkings at the crack of dawn, so maybe that new routine is causing them a bit of stress. Thanks for raising this.

 

Caroline

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We had to take Cheyenne out and kit her with her own broody box - which hasn't gone down well with the others - even though her hogging the nesting box didn't go down well with them either! :roll: So far we had a weedy egg from Apache then she missed a day but she seems to have got over herself and laid today. Sioux on the other hand goes into the nestbox, scrabbles around, whinges and comes out again. We are on day 3 with no eggs from her. Bah humbug. Cheyenne (the normally super duper layer) on the other hand loves her little box and is quite happy without the other two squashing her. We did however put it in the cube run because I felt she was too vulnerable outside - even though we can lock it up.

I agree - they had better get used to it, because it is staying for a while longer. Other than that they are very happy high-tailed lumps. Or it might have something to do with me giving her the first bum wash - hair dryer up the btm probably made her go "ooooh"! :shock:

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