Feeding Chickens in Winter

The days are getting shorter, the girls are finishing up their molts, and you are getting fewer eggs as winter approaches. You might be wondering, “is this normal?” The answer is, yes, it’s perfectly normal.

Chickens need about 16 hours of light per day to produce eggs, with the exception of some over-eager first-year hens who may lay throughout winter. But with the shortened daylight hours, and the cold weather requiring more of their energy resources to be directed to keeping their body temperatures where they need to be, egg production will go down.

Chicken in the snow

Just because your ladies have slowed down on their egg production, or even stopped, however, doesn’t mean they need less nutrition. Continuing to feed a quality, nutritious, energy-providing diet, just like you would through the warmer months, will help your girls continue some egg production and provide them the energy reserves they require to stay warm and fit. It will also help them show up next spring in prime condition to start laying regularly again.

You may hear some chicken owners say they feed a cheap layer feed, or even nothing but  scratch in winter because it is cheaper and “they aren’t laying anyway”. If you pay attention, these are often the same folks that lose birds in the winter, or their birds look pretty rough to come springtime. Scratch grains should never make up more than 10% of any bird’s diet – or what they can clean up in about 5 minutes.

Don’t forget to provide grit throughout the winter as well, as they may not be able to find it on their own due to snow and mud.

For more articles similar to this one, as well as the original, visit Nutrena, Scoop from the Coop.