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Outta Here
Songster
- May 17, 2021
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Ok, I will change the title to :Clean Nests Make Washing Unnecessary or Optional
Eggs should be washed in 'water warmer than the egg'.
Simple physics, using colder water will cause the egg contents to contract, causing any 'germs' on exterior surface of egg shell to be pulled into the interior of egg thru the shell pores. Using warmer water will do the opposite.
I seriously doubt that the coating pigment will permeate the interior, but then I've never soaked any eggs that long.
I imagine if you lived where it rained and/or snowed you might have different techniques and outcomes.
Here's how to add your general geographical location to your profile.
It's easy to do, and then it's always there!
View attachment 2860996
What soaked into the egg was not the egg's pigment, but colored water. It took a lengthy soak.
"I imagine if you lived where it rained and/or snowed you might have different techniques and outcomes." aart
If my chickens didn't have a dry, clean coop, regardless of precipitation, their feet wouldn't stay clean and neither would the nest boxes. When I raised chickens for 20 years in Idaho, their pen was snug, clean, and dry and their eggs clean right from the box, even during deep snows.
In Arizona we get deluges during the summer called monsoons, where our entire year's 14 inches of rain pounds down in about three months. Riverlets run everywhere and people even drown driving into dips on otherwise dusty roads. Mud everywhere. Throughout all this, their eggs have come from the nest box spotless. My chickens free range all day, sometimes lounging in the dry outdoor covered coop bedded with fine grass hay.They only sleep or lay in the indoor coop, bedded with sand, which is always dry and clean. I think also that walking through the dry, clean sand of the indoor coop helps keep their feet clean.
Here's my indoor coop where they mostly only sleep and lay. It has a door to the much bigger outdoor covered run, which has a door to the big wide world they free range in. I spend 5 minutes early every morning raking the poop and wiping the roosts and shelves. Sometimes I wipe with a disinfectant.
Yes, a lot has to do with design of the chicken coop and run. Maybe those just building a coop would consider ease of maintaining nest cleanliness when planning. Clean coops=clean nests=clean eggs. But the possibility of achieving this depends a lot on design and maintenance.
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