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I do not know about anyone else but, I do not have that many birds laying at one time of any breed to be able to ship eggs just laid in ONE day. I HAVE to gather eggs for 3 days in order to make at least a dozen or two dozen in my case (for shipping errors for extras). I ship silkies who are notoriously broody, so I am lucky to get 3 eggs a day out of a single color pen. I mean I do not have 50 birds of each color here, I also raise Dutch bantams and RIR's large fowl, and NONE of my large are laying or my Dutch bantams.
Take in consideration that if you have a pen of 15 of a certain breed (and/or variety) you will likely have birds that are older than a year or two, some that are last years birds and not laying yet, some are done for a while(molting), then consider possible broodies, lighting and time of year, all that might make it unreasonable to collect the amount of eggs needed to ship in one day.
That being said, what the poster said about a bird hatching a clutch of eggs is true, it may take time to gather a clutch, and they are certainly not fresh but they still hatch.
I understand that you are wanting a head start in the Spring, but you might have to consider changing your game plan and purchasing started birds in the fall, so that the females are ready to lay eggs for you to hatch in the early Spring. Sometimes things do not work out and you need to make changes in your decisions to get what you want.
Its like I get tons of people wanting 4-H birds, started chicks early Spring for fairs. I do not hatch that early in the year, so can never provide this. I am considering hatching next month to provide people with chicks in 2011.
I also wanted to throw in just as another confusing point in the fresh egg theory that I have hatched myself and even shipped an egg to one person that had been refridgerated. The one I shipped to someone did hatch(though it was a small RIR egg and not a Silkie egg - LOL) and I have set a whole incubator full of eggs (about 30) from my reds after being in the fridge for a week and a half and they still incubated and hatched.