3.4 eggs per day divided by 0.5 eggs per chicken = 3.4 / 0.5 = 6.8, or approximately 7. Estimating the number of chickens neededīased on the 0.5 eggs per chicken per day figure, if we need 24 eggs per week, as estimated above, then 24/7 = 3.4 eggs needed per day. If you prefer to be less conservative in your estimates, then you may want to plan on 250 or even 300 eggs per year, but the basic arithmetic works the same. I'll just use the figure that 1 hen lays about 1/2 egg a day (or more sensibly, we can expect 1 egg a day for every two hens). Rounding this off makes the math a little simpler. I'll estimate based on 200 eggs per hen per year. Plus, in our home flock, some of our hens have been laying for longer than a year, so their productivity has begun to decline some. I'd much rather that than to have to pick up a dozen eggs at the grocery store. I like to budget somewhat conservatively because I would rather have extra eggs at the end of the day that I can give to a neighbor, and my wife will often cook up excess eggs into a recipe that uses a lot of eggs, such as Jalapeno Cheese snacks. Here, we'll plan for 1-2 years of laying, so I'll focus on the time period when the hens are still fairly productive. By the time your hens are 10 years old, they won't lay much at all. Most good layers will lay upwards of 200 eggs a year for their first year.Īs your hens grow older, they will gradually lay less. (Based on a little research, I've found that 371 eggs in 364 days is considered the record.) A number of other breeds will lay less. The best laying breeds, such as White Leghorns, Red Stars, Black Stars, Black Australorps and Rhode Island Reds can lay 250 to 300 eggs per year during their first year of laying, possibly more. Now that we have an estimate for number of eggs needed per week, the next consideration is: how many eggs a week will your hens lay, on average? Depending on what breed you choose, that number can vary a lot. How many eggs will my chickens lay per week? Generally, 24 eggs a week seems about right for us. One or two of us will have eggs for breakfast nearly every day, and we'll occasionally make banana bread or some other dessert during the week that uses a few more eggs. I'm sure there's a lot of variation from one family to the next depending on personal food preferences, nutritional requirements and many other considerations, but just as a point of reference, our family of 6 uses about 2 dozen eggs a week. Again, this is all just an estimate that you'll later adjust as you start raising your flock. Adjust the number of eggs up or down, asĪppropriate, and use that as a starting point. If you aren't sure, then you could just keep track of how many eggs are eaten in your household for a week, then think back over the week and ask yourself if that was a typical week or not. If so, I'd recommend just going with that estimate. You may already have some idea or even a pretty accurate idea of how many eggs you use each week. A week is long enough to "smooth out" some of the day to day variations and give you a better estimate, and it's a convenient unit of time to work with. For planning like this, I like to think in terms of eggs per week. In estimating how many chickens to get, first off, you'll need to know how many eggs you want or need. Which breed you select, the age of the birds, climate, lighting, stress, nutrition, coop conditions and such all play a part. With your chickens, lots of variables will play in to how many eggs you will get from them. Not enough green beans? We planted 100 square foot bed? Let's raise 150 square feet this year. Did we get too many yellow crookneck squash last year? How many did we plant? 6 plants. So we start out with an estimate, then adjust. Weather, watering, soil fertility and lots of other variables outside your control will ultimately affect your yield. There are crop charts and such that tell how many pounds of garden produce you can expect from so many square feet of garden beds or from so many "row feet" of garden space, but these are only estimates. This is the same approach that I take with our family garden. Once your flock begins laying, you'll soon get an idea as to whether you have too many or too few, and you can adjust from there. If you haven't raised chickens previously, I recommend following along with the guidelines below to determine the size of your first flock.
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