Ask Lafeber

Question:

March 21, 2024

My darling Princess keeps laying eggs


I read your article on infertile eggs and I have done everything you said in your article. I Love this bird so much and I am trying to do everything right for her. We have a male parrot in his own cage and they do not have contact I thought his last time is would be over and she had three eggs in three days. What can I do to stop this. I don’t want her to die from ramifications from this egg laying. Please help me. All three of my parrots love your nurtiberries by the way. I had another parrot named Patrick who was also a Jardine parrot. I had him for 31 years and when he died I just couldn’t cope so along came my beautiful Princess. By the way, my Patrick never said a word and Princess talked after two weeks of having her hoin us. She is a cusser – that is my fault. She can also say her name Princess – which is not easy. Please help me with my darling!


Answer:

Hi,

I’m not sure which article you read, but I will share the changes you should make to try to discourage egg laying. If making all of these changes does not stop her, then you should take her to an avian vet to discuss hormone treatments. There is an implant and shots, but the implant seems to work very well and lasts longer.

Keep in mind that to lay eggs, she needs longer daylight, warmer weather, abundant food, and a quiet, private environment. The goal is to reverse these conditions.

Limit her light to 8-10 hours by covering the cage early each evening

Do not give her anything to use as a nest – no bird huts or tents, no box, bowl, etc. If she decides to sit in a food bowl, remove it and replace with smaller cups.

Do not give her anything to shred such as paper or cardboard.

Rearrange the toys in the cage frequently.

Move the cage to a different place in the room. Move the cage about once a week, or whenever she shows signs of nesting – settling on the cage floor for example. This disrupts her idea of having a stable place to lay eggs and raise chicks.

If you feed a lot of fresh foods, stop offering any for a couple of weeks, and then only offer them in small amounts about 2 or 3 times a week. You can resume normal feeding later when the birds aren’t being hormonal.

If she is let out of the cage, do not let her get in any dark cozy places and don’t give her free roam.

When you handle her, limit any petting to only the head and neck – do not pet a bird on the body. Only a bonded mate is allowed to groom the body. We can’t be a mate, so touching the body is off limits.

If there is no metal floor grate, then do not use any bedding or paper in the cage tray – leave it bare and clean it daily.

If the hen doesn’t stop laying, and continues to lay clutch after clutch, then a hormone implant or shots should be considered. The implant is proving to be very effective with most chronic egg layers.

Thank you for asking Lafeber,

Brenda

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