
- #FARMING SIMULATOR 19 CHICKENS NOT LAYING EGGS UPDATE#
- #FARMING SIMULATOR 19 CHICKENS NOT LAYING EGGS PLUS#
Old sheep produce 42 wool per month per sheep. In terms of sheep, having them for wool is just way more profitable then holding them for lambs. The issue I have with selling livestock when talking about sheep/chickens is that the barns aren't designed to hold the offspring. Some points of interest to continue your math:

Let them breed, in about 2 years they will have paid for themselves assuming you sold the new pigs at 12 months every time. Pigs need a lot of different food types for best results, it’s most effective to just buy pig food.

Yes, hay for cows or they won’t give enough milk to cover the cost of feeding them. Sheep and cows are the easiest to do since they only really need hay. To manage that, you need a lot of grain, and egg prices while good…are better in smaller batches because what you need to supply that kind of food is expensive. Yes, eggs are nice profit, I had four large houses filled and it was 6k food a month. You could potentially make money that way, but not much…my math said ten years to pay back the barn their living in.Ĭhickens are the most cost effective, if you can feed them. Your best bet for horses is to get a couple that can breed, ride only those two, move the babies to a separate paddock and when they hit 6 months sell them. Horses won’t usually make a profit, since they will eat their value in food in the time it takes them to reach max value. If you want animals for their “produce” then you have no reason to ever sell them and should just buy adults to get production started immediately.Ĭows fed TMR produce more milk than those fed hay or grass.īeef cows need TMR to reach the max value fastest, which is important since you get nothing from them while waiting for them to reach that max value. I’ve seen the game files, animals do not die nor do they ever stop producing milk, eggs, wool or etc. Let me know if there are any mistakes or things i've missed, hope this helps someone. 36 month old chickens will give you £629 profit or £209 per year, not bad for a £5 chicken!.Chickens lay more eggs as they get older so keeping them for 36 months is the most profitable, but they dont live as long as other animals I would sell them soon after this.No data beyond so sell at 48 months to be safest. Keep sheep for as long as you can, the older sheep produce more wool so 48 month old sheep will make £3,741 or £935 per year.Selling Cows at 12 months old is the most profitable age, on hay, they are worth £1,146 per animal.Silage feed produces more slurry and manure but the profit is lower. Scroft's figures show that cows fed hay or silage are worth the same so feed hay as it is cheaper and easier.Chickens are the most profitable even with the egg value being cut, followed by sheep and then cows.

The potential income per year under each animal was based on an initial investment of £10,000 which would get you 33 cows, 50 sheep or 2000 chickens.
#FARMING SIMULATOR 19 CHICKENS NOT LAYING EGGS PLUS#
I did calculations for beef cows, sheep, and chickens, plus a feed calculator to see the inputs needed per year based on the age and amount of animals you have.

#FARMING SIMULATOR 19 CHICKENS NOT LAYING EGGS UPDATE#
I wanted to find out which animals were the most profitable and when was the best time to sell them, so I used the input and output data I saw on Scroft's YouTube videos and the average crop prices from u/lilfitti's post but put the eggs down to £1900 as I don't know how much the average has been affected by the 1.2 update and want to be conservative.
