supermarket eggs will they hatch

plymouthrockFarm123

Songster
11 Years
Jul 1, 2008
174
2
119
i am going to go buy some organic free range chicken put them in my "incubator" (box with fake nest and 30 watt bulb on lamp) to see if they will hatch if they do or do not hatch i will tell you using this thread or i might post another one saying that i did or did not hatch them.


wish me luck i am going to go buy some tommorow
tongue.png


bye bye
 
Can I share a little info with you?

"Organic, free ranging," is a very misleading term. Basically it means two things:
- They have certified food (no pesticides or other additives). That is no hard thing to arrange these days.
- They have access to outside. "Access" can mean a little door and a small yard. No guarantee they even make it outside. It can mean a big yard outside - but normally doesn't. It most likely does NOT mean what it implies, "free-ranging" in the wide open spaces.

Remember, if your buying them in the store, they are produced on a commercial scale. I wouldn't put TOO much faith in that "organic, free range" labeling. It is there to sell a product, it's sole purpose.

I picked some eggs up the other day at the store. They were "Omega-3, vegetarian, organic, happy hens"...you name it, they had it. On the back in small writing it said, "From caged birds."
SO much for happy hens.

Besides, eggs come from hens and hens in a commercial egg business have no business with males - and normally are not kept together with them.
They've also been chilled for, how long?
Even a short time in the cooler, below 68 degrees F, can nearly kill any fertile eggs chances of developing.

But hey, what do I know? Anything is possible. I wait with 'bated breath to see your results.
 
Last edited:
the store i am going to is all organic and support local farmers soo there is a chance that the farmers use roosters to protect the hens and they accidentally get bred. and it cant hurt you if you eat a fertile egg. so there is a higher chance of organic free range to hactch rather than buying free run witch the chickens are locked in a barn not cages. and with free range they roam around a little pasture or something.
 
Last edited:
I just finished Michael Pollan's book, The Omnivore's Dilemma on my way home from work today. It has very interesting sections on industrial egg-laying and on "organic, free-range" egg-laying.

According to the book, the industrial terms mean...
* "fertile eggs" - hens had access to a rooster (or vice versa?), not that they're certified fertilized
* "free-range" - there was a door open to an outside pen during the chickens' 5th-7th weeks of life
* "organic" - fed organic feed, which can include by-products from other 'organic' chickens & animals
* "omega-3" - birds were fed a diet that contains certain elements

I highly reccomend the book to anyone.
 
soo does that mean that some hens on some farms have roosters put in with them or what??
cuz i heard on local farms were there are predators they put roosters in so they can protect the hens and they can sell fertillized eggs cant they?
 
It is all worth a try...I say. You have nothing to lose. I would try if they sold eggs like that here. Good luck!!!!
fl.gif

fl.gif
fl.gif
fl.gif
Let me know how it turns out..can't wait.Even I am getting excited for you!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom