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How to Tell a Fertile vs INfertile Egg (Pictures) - Page 7

post #61 of 427

Gosh Carrie, I don't know what you should do, maybe you can move Icecube and her eggs to a private place away from the others?  Can you separate her?

post #62 of 427

I have fertile eggs from the "egg lady"  I think I'm going to hatch some smile  Thanks...this post really helped me!  Now I know her eggs are fertile smile

Have had chickens for a whole six years now!  This year decided to try out ducks too!  WOW messy they are, but totally worth it, their cuteness overpowers all the messes they can make :D  Check them out at:  autumnbreezechickens.blogspot.com

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Have had chickens for a whole six years now!  This year decided to try out ducks too!  WOW messy they are, but totally worth it, their cuteness overpowers all the messes they can make :D  Check them out at:  autumnbreezechickens.blogspot.com

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post #63 of 427

I also read that the bigger the "ropes" and the ends of the egg, the fertile the egg is

Im that crazy male coloratura soprano-tenor, in your life...
I have:
2 silkie hens, 2 pure long haired chihuahuas, 3 red eared silder turtles, 1 cockatiel, 24 fish, and parents who gotta put up with me. Oh and Im an only child.
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Im that crazy male coloratura soprano-tenor, in your life...
I have:
2 silkie hens, 2 pure long haired chihuahuas, 3 red eared silder turtles, 1 cockatiel, 24 fish, and parents who gotta put up with me. Oh and Im an only child.
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post #64 of 427

awsome thanks

prowd owner of 4 silver layced whyendotes,
3 new hampshire reds,
and 5 golden comets . .
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prowd owner of 4 silver layced whyendotes,
3 new hampshire reds,
and 5 golden comets . .
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post #65 of 427

So thanks for the help on this subject.  What I wanted to know sorta relates to this.  I read earlier it is OK to eat the freshly fertilized eggs, but I wanted to check on how to go about taking the eggs themselves. 

I have just started the "chicken business."  I have 18 chicks right now, about 6 weeks old.  What I was planning on doing when they start layin eggs is to check for fresh ones everyday when I get home from work.  This should be plenty often enough to avoid something gross in my skillet right?

I'm just gettin started......
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I'm just gettin started......
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post #66 of 427

I put the following in as a reply on to someone else's post, but it fits here, so I'll copy it here.  I wonder if anyone else ever thought what I've thought all my life until the last couple of months. 
***********
Ya wanna talk about ignorance?  I'm seventy years old, and until two weeks ago while reading a book about chickens, all my life I thought that the white spots near the yolk was rooster sperm/semen; used to cut it out of the egg before frying/scrambling, too gross.  I had never heard nor known anyone else who knew that those two white spots were the original cords on the two ends of the egg that held the yolk in the center of the egg until the egg/shell was cracked open.  I've known lots of people who did the same thing I did.  I was really surprised to learn that in order to tell if the egg was fertile when it's in the skillet is look for a tiny little dot on both sides of the yolk. Like I said, "Ya wanna talk about ignorance?"
***********
I read about "...both sides of the yolk" on another post.  Was that correct or does the spot only show on one side of the yolk as in the pictures being shown on this post?


Edited by joebryant - 5/31/08 at 4:48am
Breathes there a woman with soul so dead who never once looked up and said,
"Gee, what can I do for Joe Bryant today."

The best laid plans of mice and men go oft' awry.
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Breathes there a woman with soul so dead who never once looked up and said,
"Gee, what can I do for Joe Bryant today."

The best laid plans of mice and men go oft' awry.
Reply
post #67 of 427

So it doesn't have to have a blood spot to be fertile?

1 husband, 3 boys, 1 cat, 1 big dog, My other family=12 hens, 6 roosters, 1 Mama hen +8 chicks, +20 more chicks, and one turkey named Ginny!
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1 husband, 3 boys, 1 cat, 1 big dog, My other family=12 hens, 6 roosters, 1 Mama hen +8 chicks, +20 more chicks, and one turkey named Ginny!
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post #68 of 427

now we need pics of them in side of the shell

I have a wife (lindsey) a baby boy on the way (Edward) a rotweiler 9 baby chicks and 4 ducklings.
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I have a wife (lindsey) a baby boy on the way (Edward) a rotweiler 9 baby chicks and 4 ducklings.
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post #69 of 427
Thread Starter 

So it doesn't have to have a blood spot to be fertile?


No. Blood spots are just burst blood vessels. Nothing to do with fertilization at all. The blastodisc spot is only in one spot on the yolk. It's what becomes a chick if it is fertilized and incubated.

 

~A dog on its owner's property is a pet; A dog on someone else's property is a predator~

 

 

Living the Good Life in the North Georgia Mountains~ Cynthia

 

 

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~A dog on its owner's property is a pet; A dog on someone else's property is a predator~

 

 

Living the Good Life in the North Georgia Mountains~ Cynthia

 

 

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post #70 of 427

Cyn, Can I use your photos of the fertile egg for my clubs website? They are fantastic pics, and a lot of people do not know what a fertile egg looks like.- Cara

Exhibition birds in Dutch Bantams, Bearded Silkies
http://www.silverpulletpoultry.net
Colorado Poultry Association
www.freewebs.com/coloradopoultryassociation
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Exhibition birds in Dutch Bantams, Bearded Silkies
http://www.silverpulletpoultry.net
Colorado Poultry Association
www.freewebs.com/coloradopoultryassociation
Reply
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