Post
by franny » Fri Feb 06, 2009 5:40 pm
Iif you want to leave the eggs for a few days, they will maybe get broody, and stop laying when they get what they think is a normal clutch size, hopefully, and just sit on them and try to hatch them for awhile. This will give the hens a break from egg production, which is hard on them.
Are they getting lots of cuttlebone? You should also be sure they get eggfood, as long as they are still laying, and possibly a calcium supplement in their water a couple of times a week (not every day).
Better to cook eggs before feeding them, too.
Better if you can discourage their laying altogether though, since this should really only be encouraged if you intend to raise babies. But with only two hens... it's hard on them. Although you might think they like the basket to sleep in, it's really just a nest to them, and they are trying to do what's in their nature to do, reproduce. But they don't need a nest to be happy. They really are just fine, roosting on a perch (natural perches, not dowels). For their long term health, it's best to remove the basket, IMO.
I found it a bit hard to remove the nest from my Goldbreasts' cage after they had their babies... but I realized after a couple of days that they were acting no different, and were perfectly happy to sleep on the perches.
I would make sure if you have silk plants in the cage tie them up close to the wire, and up high on the ceiling of the cage. So that there was no convenient place in the plants for them to try to nest. Also put tube style feeders on the outside of the cage, if you can, so they aren't tempted to use the seed dishes as nests.