They will lay a bit but eggs are quite small. I will go with production reds or americana chickens for some great egg laying hens.
No. Layers are layers and broilers are meat birds
Layers- chickens raised to lay eggs Broilers- chickens raised for meat.
Yes, they are. The ones that produce baby chickens have been fertilized, and the ones that we eat are not fertilized. Ask your grocer about the availability of duck eggs.
Layers or Hens.
Not all Polish hens are bantam. Polish chickens are available in Standard and Bantam sizes. Most popular breeds of chickens are available in a bantam form. Some obvious exception to this are Jersey Giant and Brahma.
Layers
Dominique's are steady and good winter layers. They often produce eggs every day or every other day. They are considered moderate layers.
The answer to your question can be easily found by "googling" brahma kumaris or searching for it on www.wikipedia.org. Good luck.
There are a small number of breeds of chickens with feathers on their legs. Some of these are the Cochin, Brahma, Sultan, and American Silkie.
White Leghorns are the most common breed of layer chickens.
No tobbaco isn't good for chickens. It's also not good for humans if you are about to ask.
Orpingtons are very friendly and make relatively good layers. if you want a good layer, I'd recommend leghorns, but if they are not handled enough as chicks (as with all chickens) they can become fearful or nervous. the most foolproof way to get a chickens to respond to you, is, in my experience, to raise it alone and without any other chicks around it, and INSIDE the house, where it will get the most attention. in doing this, YOU become the mother hen, and that stays throughout the chicken's life. although this probably works with all chickens, i tried this method on a leghorn who is now the sweetest thing, but doesn't like any other chickens but her "friend" Darkflight, one of my mixed breed roos. so if you want chickens that are social with people but not other chickens, try that. also I'm sure it would work with a SMALL flock of two or three raised that way.....