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Harare MetropolitanLayer Egg Production

Layer Egg Production for Harare Broiler Farmers

Strong market access in Harare makes layer farming viable with reliable weekly egg collection by buyers. Target 300+ eggs per hen per year on Lohmann Brown at $0.28-$0.35 per egg in urban Harare markets. Feed cost at $0.68/kg in Harare means layer feed per hen per year costs approximately $27.30. Managing daily intake to 105-115g is essential for profitability.

$0.68
Feed Cost/kg
$0.95
Chick Cost
$2.20
Sale Price/kg
excellent
Market Access
moderate
Grid Power

This page covers Layer Egg Production specifically for Harare conditions. For the complete Zimbabwe-wide guide:

Read the full Layer Egg Production guide for Zimbabwe →

Production Targets by Age

Point of lay (18–20 weeks): hens begin laying at 5% production rate. Peak production (26–30 weeks): 90–95% production rate (90+ eggs from 100 hens daily). Mid-production (40–60 weeks): 80–85% production. Late production (80–100 weeks): 70–75% production. Good flocks maintain 75%+ production to week 80 before culling becomes economical.

Nutrition for Maximum Egg Production

Pre-lay (16–18 weeks): 15% crude protein, increase calcium from 1% to 2%. Layer ration (from first egg): 16–17% crude protein, 3.5–4.0% calcium. Daily feed intake target: 105–115g per hen. Under-feeding by even 5g/day reduces egg production measurably within a week. In Zimbabwe, National Foods Layer Mash is the standard ration, supplement with oyster shell for calcium top-up if egg shell quality deteriorates.

Light Management

16 hours of light per day is the standard for peak production. In Zimbabwe's variable grid power environment, solar-powered lighting timers are essential, production drops are visible within 3–5 days of light interruption. Install a UPS or battery backup for the lighting circuit. At minimum ensure lights come on before dawn and continue for the required total daily hours.

When to Cull

Single-cycle economics: cull at 80 weeks when production drops below 70% and feed costs exceed revenue. Force-moulting (intentional 10-day feed restriction) can restore production to 80%+ for a second laying cycle, common in Zimbabwe's cost-conscious operations. FarmIQ tracks per-bird production trends and highlights when individual shed performance suggests a disease or management problem rather than normal age-related decline.

Key Challenge for Harare Farmers

High competition and frequent power outages require generators for brooding.

FarmIQ tracks egg production, feed cost per dozen, and alerts you when production dips unexpectedly.

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