These are commercial eggs. They are not from my flock. In fact, I bought these eggs because two of my hens have gone broody and there are a lot of pullets not quite yet at point of lay, so I'm not getting many eggs.
I was fixing breakfast this morning and I noticed something odd with one of the eggs. Does the unbroken yolk on the right have a blastodisc?!
Does this commercial egg-laying flock have a rooster running with the hens? I didn't think that commercial egg-laying flocks usually allow roosters, unless the eggs are sold as fertile, like the ones from Trader Joe's.
Should I put some in the incubator to assuage my guilt at cracking open a future chick while cooking breakfast?
Note: These eggs are from Colombia in South America. There are no Trader Joe's here. The eggs were bought in a tienda (small store). The stamp says, "Quedate en Casa" which means "Stay Home." Eggs are normally sold in a carton of 30 here. These are just ordinary eggs, not sold as cage-free, and not organic. Some egg producers here may have their layers running around loose in a barn, though.
People here prefer brown eggs. Could these be from ISA Browns or Production Reds?
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I was fixing breakfast this morning and I noticed something odd with one of the eggs. Does the unbroken yolk on the right have a blastodisc?!
Does this commercial egg-laying flock have a rooster running with the hens? I didn't think that commercial egg-laying flocks usually allow roosters, unless the eggs are sold as fertile, like the ones from Trader Joe's.
Should I put some in the incubator to assuage my guilt at cracking open a future chick while cooking breakfast?
Note: These eggs are from Colombia in South America. There are no Trader Joe's here. The eggs were bought in a tienda (small store). The stamp says, "Quedate en Casa" which means "Stay Home." Eggs are normally sold in a carton of 30 here. These are just ordinary eggs, not sold as cage-free, and not organic. Some egg producers here may have their layers running around loose in a barn, though.
People here prefer brown eggs. Could these be from ISA Browns or Production Reds?
.
.
.
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