Since I am a natural math nerd, I am always factoring in cost and dividing it out, etc. it comes from growing up on a cattle and cotton farm. Us kids always knew the marekt price of beef and cotton bales and costs to produce it.
Eventually, if you keep at it, you start coming out ahead.
Eggs were secondary to our chicken use. Or at least for me, I need them to work for me bugging and composting. Hubby wants eggs. So, what to do with all those eggs? Initially, I thought we would give them away, then realized, with our upcoming June future flock, if we end up with 8-11 hens and one roo, that is gonna be a lot of eggs. And we are sitting on a gold mine. I can sit outside
Tractor Supply or Runnings or Gebo's and unload them quickly and make a little money. Which can fold back into chicken feed or gardening stuff. Keep at it, and I have justified a flock of chickens, which initially were for entertainment and helping me work our acre of land. Now I am stoked to get eggs. I ordered a chocolate colored egg laying Marans, which is where the roo will come from and Alchemist Blues, long range plans, their offspring, produces an olive egg. Now I have chocolate, olives, and blue eggs to sell as a rainbow dozen and hatching eggs. All of a sudden, the initial outlay of $510 for 12 well bred proven birds seems worth it. Not to be wordy, but think long range and down the road and you can get pretty excited about that. And here I thought I could not sell water to a dying man in Death Valley.
But, if we can't find a market, we plan to give them to our local soup kitchen, SNAP program, or food bank, and that makes me feel very, very happy and less selfish. And I get to still use my nerdy farm math skills.
Skye