Hi, All.
The good news is that all of our ladies are laying! (This is our first experience with chickens and we have been waiting for this moment for months!) Of course, even with just 6 laying pullets, that's a LOT of eggs. Even our Polish (that is only supposed to lay 2 - 3 eggs per week) lays every day. We give a lot of the eggs away, and we eat a lot of them too. We keep several boiled eggs on hand since eggs are such ideal foods.
The problem is that they are difficult to shell. While the shells are very hard and sturdy, the membrane doesn't pick up with the shell, which makes the shelling take a long time (because I have to peel the membrane off the egg after shelling it). The egg itself tends to tear when peeling it, and although that's not a huge problem, I would like to spend less than 5 minutes trying to peel one egg. Does anyone know what causes the membrane to do this? Are we feeding too much oyster shell perhaps?
The good news is that all of our ladies are laying! (This is our first experience with chickens and we have been waiting for this moment for months!) Of course, even with just 6 laying pullets, that's a LOT of eggs. Even our Polish (that is only supposed to lay 2 - 3 eggs per week) lays every day. We give a lot of the eggs away, and we eat a lot of them too. We keep several boiled eggs on hand since eggs are such ideal foods.
The problem is that they are difficult to shell. While the shells are very hard and sturdy, the membrane doesn't pick up with the shell, which makes the shelling take a long time (because I have to peel the membrane off the egg after shelling it). The egg itself tends to tear when peeling it, and although that's not a huge problem, I would like to spend less than 5 minutes trying to peel one egg. Does anyone know what causes the membrane to do this? Are we feeding too much oyster shell perhaps?