Many hens lay their first egg around 18 weeks of age and then lay up to an egg each day, subject to breed, environment and individual bird. At 18 weeks, switch to a Purina® complete chicken layer feed to provide the added calcium laying hens need to produce an egg each day.
If raising a backyard flock was a treasure hunt, the ultimate prize would be a hen’s first egg. You started your chicks strong, moved them to the chicken coop and enjoyed their antics as they explored the backyard.
Now you might be feeling a bit of egg-ticipation and wondering when do chickens lay eggs? The first egg often arrives when hens are 18 weeks old, subject to breed, environment and nutrition. A rooster is not necessary for egg production unless you want to have fertilized eggs for hatching.
When pullets are nearing their first lay, their behavior changes. They may spend more time with the rooster, crouch for breeding or investigate the nesting area. At this time, keep hens in the coop for short periods of time. Place golf balls or decoy eggs in the nesting boxes to help hens understand the use of the nesting boxes.
The first few eggs a hen lays may be irregular – possibly small in size, with soft shells, no yolks or double yolks – but, after a week or so, egg production should become more consistent, with peak performance at about 30 weeks of age and egg goals changing each year.
To help hens lay strong and stay strong, keep the following #FlockStrong tips in mind.
1. Prepare chicken nesting boxes in the chicken coop.
Create several comfortable, clean and cozy chicken nesting boxes. On our farm, we built the nesting boxes into the coops with outdoor access for egg collection. We keep the boxes closed until the hens are 16 weeks old and then open-access after that.
A general rule for nesting box size is one 1-foot square nesting box for every four laying hens. The flock will take turns using the boxes. Line each nest box with a thick layer of straw, pine shavings or other bedding to cushion the eggs. Keep the nesting boxes up off the floor in the darkest corner of the coop with privacy to the hen.
Rugged Ranch, Duplex Nesting Box
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Little Giant Plastic Nesting Box
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Each nest area should have a uniform environment. After a hen lays her first egg, it’s her tendency to lay in the same spot moving forward. If the hens decide one nest is preferable to the others, they may all try to use that nesting box, causing themselves stress, which can lead to egg breakage or egg eating.
Sometimes hens all use the same nesting box even though they are all uniform. As long as the birds aren’t fighting or harming each other, this is probably not a big issue. If you are concerned about it, consider blocking access to the preferred nest box and guiding the hens to use one of the other available boxes. Once the hens have decided the other nest boxes work just as well, allow them access to the original nest box.
2. Consider chicken coop light.
Age is the first indicator of first lay, but daylight hours are also critical. An increase in day length is key driver to encouraging hens to lay eggs. To do their best work, laying hens prefer at least 16 hours of light and 8 hours of dark.
If your hen reaches 18 weeks of age during the fall or winter when daylight hours are getting shorter, then consider adding supplemental light to the coop. It only takes about 25-watts of incandescent light per 100 square feet to encourage hens to lay eggs. You can also use an equivalent wattage fluorescent or LED light for your flock. Without supplemental light, young hens may wait until days get longer in the spring to lay their first egg.
3. Switch to a complete chicken layer feed.
The most important change to make when chickens lay their first egg is chicken feed. From day 1 through week 17, feed chicks and pullets a complete starter-grower feed with higher protein and lower calcium.
Week 18 is the time to transition laying hens to a Purina® complete layer feed. If hens are not laying at week 18, you can still transition from a chick starter feed to a layer feed. This change may even jumpstart egg production. The earliest you should transition to a layer feed would be around 16 weeks of age. Do this if you are combining a flock of new hens with an older flock in the same coop.
Chicken layer feed should include 16 percent protein and 3.25-4.5 percent calcium. Calcium is a key nutrient when it comes to the egg-laying process. Hens need 4 grams of calcium each day to form one eggshell. If the hen does not secure enough calcium from her feed, she may pull the nutrient from her bones, which could eventually lead to a weak skeletal structure.
Eggshells take roughly 20 hours to form, so hens need a steady supply of calcium in their layer feed. Purina® complete layer feeds are the only feeds that include the Oyster Strong® System for consistent calcium release. The combination of small-particle and large-particle calcium plus vitamins and minerals releases throughout the 20-hour process to help hens form strong, protective shells.
Purina® complete layer feeds with our Oyster Strong® System are formulated to provide all 38 unique nutrients laying hens need to lay strong and stay strong – no need to supplement. Choose one complete layer feed starting at the first egg and feed for at least 90% of the hen’s diet.
• For organic hens and eggs: Purina® Organic layer feed
Purina, Organic Layer Pellets, 35 lb
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Purina, Organic Layer Crumble, 35 lb
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• For strong, healthy hens: Purina® Layena® pellets or crumbles
• For free-range diet for your hens: Purina® Layena®Plus Free Range
Laying hens can also have a few chicken treats each day, like Purina® Farm to Flock™ treats, Purina® Scratch Grains or a Purina® Flock Block®. Just be sure to limit treats to two tablespoons or fewer per hen per day to prevent diluting the nutrients in their layer feed.
Purina, Flock Block Poultry Supplement, 25 lb
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Purina, Scratch Grains Premium Poultry Grains
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Purina, Organic Scratch Grains, 35 lb
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Congratulations on your first egg! Shell-ebrate with a first egg happy dance. Ready to see the difference a complete feed can make in your flock? Sign-up for the Feed Greatness® Challenge.*
*The Feed Greatness® Challenge is a 60-day feeding trial where you will feed Purina® feed, monitor your flock’s performance and health, take pictures and receive emails with helpful information.
We would love to see your flock photos, use #mywilcolife on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram and tag Wilco Stores.