Hens need a good 12-14 hours worth of light for optimal egg production. So when winter sets in, with its shorter days, it signals your chickens to slow down and finally take a break.
A break in egg production is a great thing for those backyard hens, but not such a good thing for the owners wanting fresh eggs. Because of this, a debate arises as to whether or not to add supplemental lighting to the coop to artificially increase daylight hours and keep egg production going through the winter.
One side of the debate says the natural, nice and humane thing to do is to allow the birds a winter break. This is how their internal clocks work. Messing with nature for our own benefit is wrong.
The other side of the debate says raising hens for eggs gets much more expensive when you have to feed them through the winter without receiving any (or at least a lot fewer) eggs. It’s not cost effective to give the chickens the winter off.
There are also some that take the middle road. They give their girls a break through fall and molting and turn the lights on in January to up their egg production.
Where you land is largely a personal preference. But if you decide to add light to your coop, here are some guidelines to follow:
1. You don’t need much light. A 40-watt bulb hanging from the ceiling should do it. You need to be consistent with how you use the light. The best thing to do is get a timer to turn the lights on and off at the same time every day.
2. Don’t start using artificial lighting until after your chickens are done molting. The shortening of days signals your hens to start their molt and if they don’t have waning daylight to clue them in, they might start molting in the dead of winter when they need their feathers most.
3. It’s important to set the light to come in the morning, to start the daylight hours earlier. Don’t use it to extend the evening hours once it gets dark. Chickens can’t see in the dark and will easily get disoriented if the light is on one moment and off the next. They need time to settle in, find their place and prepare for their nighttime rest. And don’t keep it on all night. They need some darkness to get adequate rest.
4. You need 12-14 hours per day for optimal egg production, but that doesn’t mean your artificial light needs to be on that long, it just needs to extend the daylight hours for at least 12 hours.
I’m not against lighting in the coop, but I fall on the side of giving my hens a rest in the winter. I see it like allowing myself to take a much needed break after a busy summer and fall tending and harvesting the garden. My hens work hard laying an abundance of eggs all spring, summer and most of the fall. I don’t mind watching the production dwindle in the winter. Of course, my life doesn’t depend on those eggs, and my hens are like pets to me, so the decision is easier to make.
How about all of you? Where do you land and why? It’s always interesting to hear the different hen-raising perspectives out there.
Oh, and while I’m at it, I have something to give away…one of the mugs from the City Girl Farming Zazzle Store. If you’d like to be entered in the drawing, tell me a favorite recipe or way you like to use eggs. I’ll draw the name next Friday night and announce the winner here.
And BTW, the winner of the little stuffed chicken was Sharon from Ontario, Canada! Congrats!






definately let nature take its course-i would feel cruel adding extra light.my girls work hard enough x
I had heard both sides of the debate too and really didn’t know what to believe, so I asked a chicken veterinarian for his educated opinion on the subject. As it turns out, chickens don’t need a rest or break from egg-laying; it is a natural process that is not controlled by some internal clock, but rather, by light. Here is the Chicken Vet’s full commentary on these questions: http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2011/09/supplemental-light-in-coop-why-how.html
I light my coops in the fall/winter the 14-16 hours required for continued egg-production and it does not prevent my hens from molting at all. If the lights were to be left on any longer than that, THAT would interfere with molting and be detrimental to their health. Nutrition is also a major factor in egg production (and is really more of a concern than supplemental light) for chickens that do not free-range and are given an excess of treats.
Thanks for your insights on this subject and for asking for ours, I think it’s a fascinating topic!
Cheers,
Kathy Shea Mormino
The Chicken Chick
http://www.The-Chicken-Chick.com
Thanks for weighing in on the debate. Great that you have a vet you can chat to about such things.
I wish he were local because my vets don’t see chickens. I contacted this vet a while ago for the specific purpose of sharing his answers to questions lots of us backyard chicken-keepers have. For the most part, all we have to rely on is each other and what we have ‘heard’ from non-experts, or what we read an interpret in books, which really puts us at a disadvantage in caring for our chickens.
Have a great week, I look forward to your posts! I would love it if you would link up at my weekly Clever Chicks Blog Hop: http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2012/12/Clever-Chicks-Blog-Hop-12.html
I hope you can make it!
Kathy
I love making mayonnaise with my fresh eggs. Here’s how…http://ruminski.wordpress.com/2012/06/28/making-mayo-easy-peasy/
I’ve never tried making mayo…maybe I should! (Although I have to admit I’m much more of a mustard person…but I’m intrigued!)
Omelet, quiche, baking, mixed up in chicken noodle soup…………I like eggs!
You mix them up in chicken noodle soup–you mean kind of like egg flower soup or something like that? Interesting…I might have to try that!
I just made the old fashioned lemon icebox pie, the one with a graham cracker/butter crust and made with 3 egg yolks, 1 can eagle brand milk and 1/2 cup lemon juice. It was sooo good! And so easy!
Yum! Sounds good!
I’m all about letting the chickens do what feels natural. We do use a black light to add heat to the coop as anything brighter found them trying to sleep outside. That pretty much defeated the purpose. Now all they need is a Jimmi Hendrix poster inside the coop and they will be all set.
They are currently laying enough eggs to earn their keep but it doesn’t really matter. We love them and they are pets.
I used to be just like you…. let the hens have a break. But my daughter lived in Hawaii for many years and the chickens didn’t have shorter days in the winter. My son said that it didn’t happen in Mexico, either. Now we light the coop to give them longer daylight hours. We don’t seem to have any health problems, so we’ll keep it up.
Oh thanks for that insight. You bring up a good point. Hmmmm. Now I’m pondering my position again!
Hmm my favorite way to use eggs? OH yes, my favorite way to use eggs is making chocolate chip cookies!
We are new to the chicken keeping fun and got our first hens this summer. Unfortunately they reached POL around the same time that the days started getting much shorter so none of them started laying! We haven’t been lighting the coop this winter so hopefully they’ll start laying in the spring. Maybe once we’ve had a whole year of eggs we’ll feel differently next winter – its interesting to hear some of the different points of view about it. Fortunately we got our girls as much for pets as eggs so we’re not too cross about waiting an extra couple of months for our first eggs
I don’t need egg production but my chickens don’t want to go in their coop until around 8:30pm. I have light on in their chicken space until they put themselves in the coop. It’s then, that I turn off the lights. They are still laying, but do not appear unhealthy or stressed.
I love the blog and websites and a great article. I actually need to adjust my lighting after reading this. But that’s how it goes, live, learn and read up. I’m all for the artificial lighting. I love the girls but they are there for a reason and that reason is eggs. Living up in Alaska our winter daylight hours are so limited, I’m in Anchorage so it’s not as bad as further north, and our chickens really need that extra light.
I love fresh eggs, & I love this blog.
Recipe idea for your fresh eggs=Stacciatella. An easy Italian spinach soup.
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Spinach-Stracciatella-Soup-236395
My favorite is deviled eggs. So easy, great for a snack or for bringing a covered dish for dinner. Star with cooled hard boiled eggs. Cut in half, yolks in one bowl, whites on a platter. Put mayo, little mustard, a little sugar, dash of salt and pepper, with fork, mix well. Then i like using a butter knife for filling your hollowed out whites with your yolk mixture. Sprinkle paprika on top. Yummy good. I’d love a cup kerrie, could i purchase one? I miss my miss jane……
Hi Teresa, thanks for stopping by. Yes, there are mugs avaiable through my Zazzle store. Here’s a direct link to the mug, but there’s lots of other chicken designs over there as well, so look around.
http://www.zazzle.com/i_heart_chickens_mug-168796598058707741
Mmmm. I love deviled eggs, too! It’s one of my favorite ways to eat eggs!
I’m in the give the chickens a partial break. I usually give them about 2 months off in the winter. I experimented some with how much light and finally settled on a 40 watt bulb. Seemed like the minimum I could get away with cost wise.