Blue green eggs your blue eggs like Sjturner says are the ones without much brown coating. In the last part of the oviduct the hen applies the brown coating. Each time she lays an egg she uses some of the coating. After a while in chocolate egg layers the colour drops off from dark brown to light brown. When they stop laying their reservoir builds up again and the next egg will be dark again. It's a matter of palette really - brown and blue make green.
Bedding my home made hay doesn't go mouldy which is why I like it. I normally use straw when I don't have grass and used it for a long time before a friend talked me into grass. I thought it would be too much work. But it works well. The sugar cane mulch is organic and supposedly safe for chickens and other animals. But I don't like it at all. It is like chaff. Hate it and it wasn't the same as I have had before and what I expected. I couldn't get the straw this time when I ran out of grass .
Regions are anywhere not in the major cities. I'm sorry I should have realised that could mean somewhere different to different people. So I refer to the bush, mining communities, outback and even small cities.
cancer was a lifetime ago it seems now and I am well - although not fit as the multiple surgeries and wasting before getting on PTA (intravenous feed) took their toll. Thanks for your comments.
Cheers
I use our hay and have only had an issue with mold once. The rain was running down the back wall of the nest boxes , but a bit of flashing put an end to that.
Hay is very scarce this year and is up to $26 a bale arlready.
