That is an old wives tale. This does not cause egg eating in chickens.Yes, make sure to crush them enough so they don't start eating their eggs.
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That is an old wives tale. This does not cause egg eating in chickens.Yes, make sure to crush them enough so they don't start eating their eggs.
I not only give them their own egg shells back, but when we have a surplus of eggs we boil and give them eggs as well. The last thing they eat before hatching is yolk. It's great protien during winter or a pick me up for a sick or injured hen. Better their healthy shells and eggs than store bought!Not sure if my question makes sense - I feel it’s wrong to feed the chickens the egg shells of their own eggs they lay or is it ok to give them that extra nutritious dose of calcium?
Even if it comes from their own eggs that they lay. For some reason (morally) feels wrong to give them something that came from themI guess it’s ok since I’ve given them grocery store egg shells before they started laying as an added snack bonus. Curious to hear what more experienced folk think have on the topic
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Exactly. You know what's been on those shells and where they've been.I not onl
I not only give them their own egg shells back, but when we have a surplus of eggs we boil and give them eggs as well. The last thing they eat before hatching is yolk. It's great protien during winter or a pick me up for a sick or injured hen. Better their healthy shells and eggs than store bought!
I'm not overfeeding calcium. The main source is the layer, the eggshells on the side are just in case they need a little extra calcium. They choose when they want it, I'm not forcing extra calcium on them. I don't see the problem in a fast releasing supplement because that isn't the main calcium source.Chickens need two kinds of calcium. Oyster shells provide a slow-release form while the old eggshells provide a fast release. Don't overfeed calcium in any form as that can cause kidney disease in chickens.
I am by no means an expert, but their shells go directly into the leftover food bin for the hens. (they go in there crushed and otherwise as-is) The hens eat them just fine, no muss, no fuss.Do you have to cook them first or just wash, crush and serve?