cleaning for dirty eggs no water

morganthendricks

Chirping
Sep 10, 2020
25
30
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I’m selling the eggs. If I destroy the plume with water, I can’t sell them, because I like to give my customers high quality eggs!

Right now, I just rub them and scrape the dirt off. The other half with dirt on it, I can’t sell because the quality of the eggs is not up to my standards.

Can you guys tell me what you use to clean the eggs?
 
I’m selling the eggs. If I destroy the plume with water, I can’t sell them, because I like to give my customers high quality eggs!

Right now, I just rub them and scrape the dirt off. The other half with dirt on it, I can’t sell because the quality of the eggs is not up to my standards.

Can you guys tell me what you use to clean the eggs?
So, what do you sell them for? Eating, or hatching? If you wash them for hatching, your right, you could make the egg venerable to bacteria, and make it unable to hatch. If you are selling them to eat, it can be dangerous if you down wash them good enough, unless the people know they need to wash them before consumption.
 
Selling them for eating. There’s this one chicken who’s always laying dirty eggs. Shes the leader of the pecking order. I would like to sell my eggs with that color.
 
sandpaper is the only thing allowed here to remove any poop traces on the shell of otherwise grade a eggs - it avoids washing the bloom off, and as long as the shell is strong and thick enough, you can take off the surface where the poop was. Good luck!
 
sandpaper is the only thing allowed here to remove any poop traces on the shell of otherwise grade a eggs - it avoids washing the bloom off, and as long as the shell is strong and thick enough, you can take off the surface where the poop was. Good luck!
That's the 'law' there?
Sandpaper never made any sense to me, it could sand off the bloom.
 

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