No, they will not.
it depends on the chicken some do stop but after their older and some might not stop laying but they will slow down (not lay as frequent)
All chickens lay best in the spring and the fall. Most chickens stop altogether during the summer and winter.
There is no mammal that lays chickens. Even chickens do not lay chickens: they lay eggs. there are two types of egg-laying mammals (not chicken-laying), and they are the platypus and the echidna.
is it winter?? that is probably why they are not laying. or they dont have enough nutrients.
Yes, Wyandotte chickens are the nicest chickens I have ever encountered. They are large, meaty and great egg - laying birds. The roosters have never hurt each other in a confrontation, and their coloration is absolutley beautiful.
Various reasons will decrease or stop egg laying. Laying tends to die off in the winter when the days are shorter and the weather cooler. Older chickens will also experience decreased egg production. If a chicken is not in an ideal environment or is experiencing stress or depression they might stop laying altogether.
When chickens get to an age they decide to stop laying. They just get too old. Because it is winter at the moment, chickens are molting (loosing all of their feathers) and they often have a 'break' from laying for about a month. I have 20 or so chickens and I am only getting 3 eggs a day because most of them are molting. Your bantam could just be being slack or just old. Hope this helps....
If you take really good care of your chickens, they can live to be 10 years. and they lay eggs for about 5years.
No
Chickens don't require laying mash to lay. The feed suppliers just formulated a feed that is balanced nutritionally to support laying birds.
You should begin feeding your chickens Laying Mash at between 18 and 20 weeks. Laying Mash is a special type of chicken feed.