Chicken Nesting

   / Chicken Nesting #21  
our "ceramic" egg was actually wood with a coating. We know this because one of the dogs got it and tried to crack it open like and egg. We used home depot buckets for nesting boxes. they did like to take all the bedding out of them, but did lay in them. the "ceramic" egg worked for us, but we got them before they started laying and only knew the one place.
 
   / Chicken Nesting #22  
our "ceramic" egg was actually wood with a coating. We know this because one of the dogs got it and tried to crack it open like and egg. We used home depot buckets for nesting boxes. they did like to take all the bedding out of them, but did lay in them. the "ceramic" egg worked for us, but we got them before they started laying and only knew the one place.

Friend of mine, many years ago, told me they tore down the old chicken house on the family farm. He said they found, underneath the floor, the skeleton of a snake with a ceramic egg smack in the middle of it. See? Crime does not pay.
 
   / Chicken Nesting #23  
I put the golf ball back in the box I made. I'll see if there are any eggs in it tomorrow
 
   / Chicken Nesting #24  
I have 3 identical nesting boxes in my coop. The hens only lay in one of them. One hen will be in there laying and 2 others will be waiting outside cackling like mad for her to hurry up. Sometimes when one can't wait, it will jump in the box with the other one, packed like sardines.
 
   / Chicken Nesting #25  
I致e had chickens for 10 years. I have metal boxes, with roosts. I mounted the boxes low, in the dark corner. I put wooden eggs in a couple of boxes. They will naturally lay together if they can. I致e had up to 40 layers, and a 10 hole nest box. They might lay 40 eggs in maybe 6 or 7 holes. I use pine shavings for the boxes, and for the floor. You should have a calcium source, and grit for the birds. I built roosts with slide out trays to catch the poo. Chickens can be creative, they find weird ways to die. I致e found that the best layers are the most aggressive foragers, going further from the coop than others. And getting picked off by predators more often. The fat, lazy birds don稚 get killed much, but don稚 lay well either. They best layers seem to just die earlier than the fat girls. After 2 years, egg production is pretty much done.
 
   / Chicken Nesting #26  
I built some cubbies by ripping plywood to 4'x16", notched so they just fit together and make a grid.
When I first let the chickens at them, they quickly kicked all of the straw out, so I put about a 2" strip across the front. It keeps most of the straw in; using rice straw helps a lot too because it doesn't go flying as easily as other straws.
I still find the odd egg in the compost or somewhere in the chicken run, but for the most part the hens lay in a hen box.
 
   / Chicken Nesting #27  
. Sometimes when one can't wait, it will jump in the box with the other one, packed like sardines.

That's what I have found with the large wooden box I built for my large chickens.
One of my large Asian chicken will be in that big box laying, and another chicken will get in with her like ...move over so I can lay in this box.. lol I have 10 of the store box metal boxes they can use
 
   / Chicken Nesting #28  
Well sure enough. I put those golf balls back into the large wooden box I made and they laid !

I can't say it will work for everyone cause these chickens have seen golf balls in the laying boxes since they begin laying. So, that may have something to do with it
 
   / Chicken Nesting #29  
I am having a bad time with them eating the eggs. Yes I have calcium in the pen in a separate feeder of crushed shells and I mix crushed shells in the feed. They really don't eat the shells, but crack them and peck up the yolk. The colder it is outside the worse this is. I think I may try to close up the openings a bit as they are about 1 foot square. Maybe make them a 10inch circle.
 
   / Chicken Nesting
  • Thread Starter
#30  
I am having a bad time with them eating the eggs. Yes I have calcium in the pen in a separate feeder of crushed shells and I mix crushed shells in the feed. They really don't eat the shells, but crack them and peck up the yolk. The colder it is outside the worse this is. I think I may try to close up the openings a bit as they are about 1 foot square. Maybe make them a 10inch circle.

Some of the nesting boxes Ive seen on Youtube have a split curtain in front of the opening. Dont know if this helps or not would be cheap to try. I have noticed that the more confined mine are the more likely they are to get into something they shouldnt.
As for my problems tomorrow I will put in a threshold to try. I even thought about a 3 inch deck screw to hold the fake egg in. 😀
 

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