EGG Bomb!

Chickenfan4life

Crowing
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So, I'm running through the field playing tag with the family and I feel something pop beneath my feet and spray up onto my legs... The wet stuff is sticky and yellow. I go back to where the thing popped and saw the busted remains of an EGG! I ran over and egg mine! LOL! The weird thing is it was smack-dab in the middle of an open field... Kinda weird.
hu.gif
Thanks for reading this!
 
Wild turkeys lay eggs in the middle of our fields. Just before cutting for hay, I'll walk the land and scoop up eggs and let a friend hatch them out for later release. Always a sad sight to see the turkey hen looking for her nest.
 
You have turkeys, oldchick? Cool!

I'm guessing I have it figured out, why the egg was in the field: we have a Dachshund that gets into the coop and steals eggs, but he tends to drop them along the way and lose them! Roscoe, you bad boy! But, yeah, if he doesn't drop them he buries them in our garden! (I've witnessed it!)
 
How weird is that!

The best thing about the country is definitely the wildlife, and you're right Chickenfan, It is awesome. It's cool to help animals learn to trust you, and I don't want to boast, but I have a roe deer, a hare, a magpie, a blackbird, a hedgehog and a pair of pheasants that will eat from my hand and come running (or flying) to see me.

If you ever get the chance, you should try and move to the country. All I can say is that life is amazing here. I know some peeps love city life, but it's country all the way for me. When you're sitting in front of the hearth, with a collie at your feet, a hawk on her perch in the corner, and a cup of tea, all troubles seem to melt away...

Deep and profound I know, but it does feel amazing.
 
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How weird is that!

The best thing about the country is definitely the wildlife, and you're right Chickenfan, It is awesome. It's cool to help animals learn to trust you, and I don't want to boast, but I have a roe deer, a hare, a magpie, a blackbird, a hedgehog and a pair of pheasants that will eat from my hand and come running (or flying) to see me.

If you ever get the chance, you should try and move to the country. All I can say is that life is amazing here. I know some peeps love city life, but it's country all the way for me. When you're sitting in front of the hearth, with a collie at your feet, a hawk on her perch in the corner, and a cup of tea, all troubles seem to melt away...

Deep and profound I know, but it does feel amazing.
I have helped a few wild animals that used to know me (until they vanished), but we don't get much wildlife around here. We live on 4 1/2 acres of field but we only get the usual birds and other animals. Still, I intent on living in the country someday!
 
Well, I hope it works out for yah! I know how horrid it is when an animal you've 'tamed' vanishes... I spent almost three months throwing dead mice to a barn owl, who eventually cottoned on that I wouldn't hurt her, and used to take meat from my hand. I can't describe the feeling of a bird of prey literally eating from your hand, she was such a magnificent creature. One day she wasn't in her normal spot. I searched the garden for hours but I couldn't find her. On leaving the house that afternoon, along with the usual dead pheasants and hares on the side of the road, was my owl.

What was worse, was she wasn't dead yet.

We took her to the vet but it wasn't enough. She died that night.

Three days after that, when I was walking in the forest, I heard a weak rasping noise emanating from a whole in a huge oak tree. I climbed up to the hole and there, right in front of me, where three tiny owlets, almost dead of starvation. They were obviously the chicks of my owl, and that was the reason she was on the road. She had resorted to picking at roadkill to feed her babies. I decided not to take them home, but instead feed them in their tree. After a few months, they were ready to fledge, and my owlets, the offspring of the owl I took months to train, flew off into the forest, and I never saw them again.

I'm glad they survived, but I wish they would've stayed around for a bit.
 
Well, I hope it works out for yah! I know how horrid it is when an animal you've 'tamed' vanishes... I spent almost three months throwing dead mice to a barn owl, who eventually cottoned on that I wouldn't hurt her, and used to take meat from my hand. I can't describe the feeling of a bird of prey literally eating from your hand, she was such a magnificent creature. One day she wasn't in her normal spot. I searched the garden for hours but I couldn't find her. On leaving the house that afternoon, along with the usual dead pheasants and hares on the side of the road, was my owl.

What was worse, was she wasn't dead yet.

We took her to the vet but it wasn't enough. She died that night.

Three days after that, when I was walking in the forest, I heard a weak rasping noise emanating from a whole in a huge oak tree. I climbed up to the hole and there, right in front of me, where three tiny owlets, almost dead of starvation. They were obviously the chicks of my owl, and that was the reason she was on the road. She had resorted to picking at roadkill to feed her babies. I decided not to take them home, but instead feed them in their tree. After a few months, they were ready to fledge, and my owlets, the offspring of the owl I took months to train, flew off into the forest, and I never saw them again.

I'm glad they survived, but I wish they would've stayed around for a bit.
Oh, that is such a sad story... But you are a really wonderful person! Thank you just for saving those creatures' lives; you have no idea how much it cheers me up to know that there are still good people out there!
 

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