unless they actually say fertile on the packaging dont waste your timeSo I'm considering trying something, and it's probably a bad idea but I only have three chicken eggs left that haven't hatched in the incubator and once those are done I really want to try hatching more eggs. The only problem is I don't have any eggs to put in the bator. So... I'm thinking about trying some of the free range, cage free, and organic eggs from Wal Mart. I know, I know, none of those things mean that the eggs will be fertile, and the refrigeration and age could make the eggs useless for hatching, but hey why not. I don't have any more than ten dollars in 48 eggs, and if I can hatch one chick out of those 48, I'll consider that a success. My plan is to break open eggs out of each dozen to check for fertility, and if I find a fertile egg I'll place the rest of that carton into the incubator. I'll continue this process until I'm out of eggs or I find a fertile egg. If I find fertile eggs great, if not my wife says we can eat omelets, and every other food that she can think of that requires eggs for the next three or four days, that way this project won't be a total waist. I really don't have high hopes for the eggs but I bought four different types from Wal Mart, and each one comes from a different farm, so maybe, just maybe one of these farms had a rogue rooster running around. I know people have had some success using trader joes, and whole foods eggs, but has anyone ever tried Wal Mart eggs, and if so what was your experience with them?
I have hatched trader joes and whole foods fertile eggs that have been refrigerated 18 days.