Plus, How to Store Fresh Eggs from Backyard Chickens
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Your answer was somewhat incorrect. Egg yolks have spots on them naturally, this is where the sperm fertilizes the egg...however the spot is there whether or not the egg has been fertilized. Any red seen in eggs can be originated from the hen's uterus, sometimes a small chunk will be in the egg. Other blood as you indicated, may be an egg that has been fertilized and set on by a broody hen. If the red is there and no one is setting, it's from the hen who layed it. And yes bought eggs do have the spot on the yolk, and some have the pieces of uterine tissue. Personally, I would not want to eat an egg which has started incubating....
Well, I think I messed up. I hand washed a dozen fresh eggs using cool water and Dawn dish soap. Should I refrigerate them now and how long will they last?
Never use any soap thay is not Organic. Eggs breath and will absorb what is put on the shells or what the eggs are put in. Dawn soap is Not safe to wash the eggs in. I raise and sell free range, organic chicken eggs...
Yes, refrigerate the eggs if you’ve washed them. They should last 1-2 months in the fridge, though they will have a better taste if eaten sooner.
Every year they go 鈥渙ff-lay鈥 (stop laying eggs) for several months. This happens over the winter, when there鈥檚 too little daylight to trigger egg-laying. They鈥檒l begin again in the spring.
That might be relative-during our relatively mild Central NC winters, our hens layed year round, while living in a unheated shelter (cedar shaving insulated) with fenced in outdoors area. These last two Winters-I have had to mow grass in Dec, Jan, and Feb-something I have never had to do before!
Thank you for all of the change Chickens and eggs caring
there is a brooding feral chicken in my yard - she's been there at least a week, maybe longer. are her eggs still edible even after they've been developing, and up to how many of the 21 days gestation period? if i push her off and take the eggs, will she come back if i leave her a few?
Well, I've partially answered my own questions: she let me take a couple of eggs before she scarpered off in a very agitated and truculent manner...there were 17 eggs! I took 10 and left 7. The fetuses were quite well developed - I'guess half way through the gestation period. Not at all appetizing, to me, but the two feral cats I feed polished them off, a little hesitantly. They enjoyed the fetuses well enough, but took their time over ingesting the yolk.
After half an hour, mama reappeared looking rather flustered and investigated the territory surrounding her nest. Seemingly satisfied, she reentered said nest and resumed brooding. Papa also appeared as part of the reentry process, surveying the scene with a protective, authoritarian air. Duly satisfied, he crowed once and strutted off back in the direction from whence he had come..........
I'm curious to see whether she lays more eggs, and whether the existing ones proceed to maturity given her half hour absence. Que sera sera.....
Really disgusting. First feral cats are a menace to wild birds. I think it's awful that you took the hen's babies, yes the forming chicks are babies and gave them to feral cats. If you are a cat lover, then take them into your home and not leave them out preying on the native birds of your area. If you don't really want them as your pets, then please have them trapped and taken to an animal shelter. Feral cats not only are a menace to the native species they prey on, but if not vaccinated are a major rabies potential.
If an egg is not washed ( removing the bloom) , can it be left on the counter for a few days???