How much do your chickens naturally lay eggs?

Sometimes the internet doesn't anyways provide every answer that we're looking for. So I wanted to ask any of you, how many eggs do your chickens lay per year? // ARTICLE 1: There was one article that said that wild chickens naturally lay around only 12 eggs a year, due to the amount of energy that goes into producing their eggs. //

ARTICLE 2: While it says that commercialized chickens can lay an egg every day. But those chickens are injected with hormones to increase egg production, and their bones become brittle because of the excessive amount of eggs they have to lay. They are forced to live in extremely bad conditions, in which there is a lot of chicken fecal matter in the air. Which is very unsanitary and can lead to diseases, plus some chickens die in there. So on top of the chicken fecal matter, there's also dead rotting chickens. Which would contaminate the chickens and their eggs. Those commercialized chickens that lay the eggs aren't edible in the first place. But still if those chickens have been pumped with hormones, became sick from the contaminated area and had high levels of stress. All that from those chickens is going directly into the eggs. So in a way, each commercialized egg is a bad egg. Hormones pumped into a chicken........ it's going to affect the eggs. Not cleaning out chicken fecal matter or dead chickens out of the area. It's going to have a sickening contaminated area......... that's going to affect the eggs. Cramming multiple chickens into an area the size of a filing cabinet is going to lead to high levels of stress and cause more hormonal imbalances......... that's going to affect the eggs. Yeah sure they might produce more eggs, but those eggs are already contaminated with sickness and injected hormones. And they're much more nutrient deficient because of those two factors along with the high stress. There's even a difference between the shell of a commercialized egg and a natural egg. The shell of a natural egg is thicker. But most of all I believe that it's very wrong with how the commercialized chickens are treated.

Article 3: There was a site that provided information about hybrid chickens being the best chickens for egg production. Yes, I looked up just to be sure that hybrid chickens aren't genetically modified. That the other two breeds they came from were natural. Anyways it said that these natural hybrid chickens produce anywhere from 250 - 270 eggs per year. Plus those breeds were ones that don't require as much food as other chickens. So this makes me think, if these aren't commercialized chickens, then how do they still produce so much? I know it said their egg production isn't as high as commercialized eggs. That these ones' egg production is two-thirds of a commercialized chicken. But still it's a lot of eggs, plus it's really good if they're not pumped full of hormones, not in a sick contaminated area and have space to roam and stress free. But still is a wild chicken's egg production much lower than these natural hybrids. Because without humans supporting their survival, it would make it harder for them?

The answers I need. : So what I really need to know is, how many eggs do your all natural chickens lay? Are they hybrid chickens or non-hybrid? How much space do you give them?

Advice: There are however some useful tips I saw on some articles about chickens. Chicken feed is expensive, and there are actually ways to feed your chickens at a much lower cost to no cost. Obviously when it comes to saving money, your mind and the creative outside-the-box stuff within it are the number one money savers. So think creatively and experiment, but still look at information about those things whenever you can. Sometimes you just have to let your mind flow free, because sometimes we make things seem much harder than they actually are or need to be. And whenever you look into things like that, always pay attention to the little things. Because whenever it happened to me, it was always the little things rather than the larger things that made the biggest negative impacts. Those small things which I didn't take into consideration before, made things much harder. Because it disrupted the order of what to do, and they caused confusion. So always think things thoroughly beforehand, because it's always better to asses the details of every possibility. Rather than being stuck in the middle of the situation from confusion. Confusion in the moment is the worst enemy, because it can lead to more disorganization, which is time consuming. Sometimes going too fast with things, can cause more mistakes which actually makes you stay in that situation longer. And obviously time efficiency is one of your best friends. Also if you do the little things successfully, then those little things can have a big positive impact. I know I mentioned the chickens, but still I just felt like giving this advice. Even if some of it might be obvious. But if you do let me know about the chickens then thank you.

Sometimes the internet doesn't anyways provide every answer that we're looking for. So I wanted to ask any of you, how many eggs do your chickens lay per year? // ARTICLE 1: There was one article that said that wild chickens naturally lay around only 12 eggs a year, due to the amount of energy that goes into producing their eggs. //ARTICLE 2: While it says that commercialized chickens can lay an egg every day. But those chickens are injected with hormones to increase egg production, and their bones become brittle because of the excessive amount of eggs they have to lay. They are forced to live in extremely bad conditions, in which there is a lot of chicken fecal matter in the air. Which is very unsanitary and can lead to diseases, plus some chickens die in there. So on top of the chicken fecal matter, there's also dead rotting chickens. Which would contaminate the chickens and their eggs. Those commercialized chickens that lay the eggs aren't edible in the first place. But still if those chickens have been pumped with hormones, became sick from the contaminated area and had high levels of stress. All that from those chickens is going directly into the eggs. So in a way, each commercialized egg is a bad egg. Hormones pumped into a chicken........ it's going to affect the eggs. Not cleaning out chicken fecal matter or dead chickens out of the area. It's going to have a sickening contaminated area......... that's going to affect the eggs. Cramming multiple chickens into an area the size of a filing cabinet is going to lead to high levels of stress and cause more hormonal imbalances......... that's going to affect the eggs. Yeah sure they might produce more eggs, but those eggs are already contaminated with sickness and injected hormones. And they're much more nutrient deficient because of those two factors along with the high stress. There's even a difference between the shell of a commercialized egg and a natural egg. The shell of a natural egg is thicker. But most of all I believe that it's very wrong with how the commercialized chickens are treated.Article 3: There was a site that provided information about hybrid chickens being the best chickens for egg production. Yes, I looked up just to be sure that hybrid chickens aren't genetically modified. That the other two breeds they came from were natural. Anyways it said that these natural hybrid chickens produce anywhere from 250 - 270 eggs per year. Plus those breeds were ones that don't require as much food as other chickens. So this makes me think, if these aren't commercialized chickens, then how do they still produce so much? I know it said their egg production isn't as high as commercialized eggs. That these ones' egg production is two-thirds of a commercialized chicken. But still it's a lot of eggs, plus it's really good if they're not pumped full of hormones, not in a sick contaminated area and have space to roam and stress free. But still is a wild chicken's egg production much lower than these natural hybrids. Because without humans supporting their survival, it would make it harder for them?The answers I need. : So what I really need to know is, how many eggs do your all natural chickens lay? Are they hybrid chickens or non-hybrid? How much space do you give them?Advice: There are however some useful tips I saw on some articles about chickens. Chicken feed is expensive, and there are actually ways to feed your chickens at a much lower cost to no cost. Obviously when it comes to saving money, your mind and the creative outside-the-box stuff within it are the number one money savers. So think creatively and experiment, but still look at information about those things whenever you can. Sometimes you just have to let your mind flow free, because sometimes we make things seem much harder than they actually are or need to be. And whenever you look into things like that, always pay attention to the little things. Because whenever it happened to me, it was always the little things rather than the larger things that made the biggest negative impacts. Those small things which I didn't take into consideration before, made things much harder. Because it disrupted the order of what to do, and they caused confusion. So always think things thoroughly beforehand, because it's always better to asses the details of every possibility. Rather than being stuck in the middle of the situation from confusion. Confusion in the moment is the worst enemy, because it can lead to more disorganization, which is time consuming. Sometimes going too fast with things, can cause more mistakes which actually makes you stay in that situation longer. And obviously time efficiency is one of your best friends. Also if you do the little things successfully, then those little things can have a big positive impact. I know I mentioned the chickens, but still I just felt like giving this advice. Even if some of it might be obvious. But if you do let me know about the chickens then thank you. https://ift.tt/eA8V8J https://ift.tt/2L4Uwm3

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