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Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About Eggs
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I often find a double yolk. What was the "old wives tale" re a double yolk egg? Wasn't it bad luck to eat an egg with two yolks?
This is an old post but just in case others are interested. When chickens are young their egg producing systems haven't got the hang of it yet and they may produce many variations of egg type's. Some may have double yoke's and others may be extremely large or be extraordinarily small.
Many year's ago A trucker that patronised the gas station I worked at brought down from A chicken farm in central Wisconsin cases of egg's that were unsellable because of the odd egg's that their young stock produced. Many of them had double yoke's. 2 dozen free egg's every week! Those were the day's!!!
Brown !!!
My parents used to raise 47 different breeds of chickens. My Dad showed them at several county fairs each year (2 hens & 1 rooster per pen). He had very little competition in all 47 different breeds. The premiums were the same for a pig, a sheep, or a cow & the chickens took up less space on the shipping truck, taking them all to the fair. And the chickens didn't need as much feed as the other livestock either.
Just a memory from a former Farm Kid.
We prefer brown eggs, to me they have a better flavor, we have laying hens
Fresh organic eggs, nutritious,
No hormones
I've always preferred brown eggs.
That is not true at all. My Americanas have brown ears and they lay Blue/green eggs. Silkies have blue ears and they lay brown small eggs. It's the breed of the chicken that determines the color
Breed May have an initial bearing on egg color, but it isn't the only factor. I have two dark Brahma hens which, by breed, lay brown eggs. One of mine lays a tan egg. One lays a cream colored egg.
On an off side, one lays short, pudgy eggs and the other lays longer, thin-ish eggs.
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