PREPPER TIP: Waterglassing eggs...Preserve fresh eggs at room temp for up to 2 years. Here’s how:
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Would you mind answering this question? I always wondered how that worked. If an egg, under the right circumstances, would become a chick. But I was given to understand that the eggs we buy at the grocery store were unfertilized. You said you had roosters with the hens. How do you know (or do you) which would be fertilized and which wouldn't? Or do I have that all wrong? Thanks.
You are correct in that commercial egg operations have no need for a rooster and fertilization as the eggs will never be more than just that - eggs. Hens will lay the same amount of eggs regardless of whether or not they have been bred by a rooster.
I have no idea whether or not my eggs have been fertilized, other than folks who take my eggs and incubate them telling me how many hatch out. We will start be starting a chick operation sometime this year with straight Easter Egger and Olive Egger breeds so I will know more then. I was told if you want to ensure the majority of your eggs are viable to produce chicks you should have no more than 20:1 ratio of hens/roosters. Talk about a life!
My point about our eggs having sat around at room temperature on counters and then traveling to Mexico and still being hatched after 5-6 weeks after being laid proves that farm fresh eggs without having been washed are obviously not ‘rotten’ or compromised after that long. Store bought eggs will go bad sooner than that even with refrigeration. The old timers around here say they would have eggs for 3-4 months on the counter and would only use them if they didn’t ‘float’/stand up on one end in water. Apparently when they do start going bad they build up additional gases inside which makes them buoyant - and that’s how the folks long ago used to know if an egg was good or bad.
A chick operation! Cuteness overload. Oh my goodness, that ought to be fun. I wish you'd post some pictures when you get them. I love to go to the feed store just to see the chicks.
And thanks for the other info, as well. I have learned a lot today. It's very interesting and good stuff to know. Thanks again and take care.