fertile eggs? Can I eat them????

Tracie70

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I hope I am posting this in the right section for this question.
I am very new to this....My chickens are about 8 weeks old and I am just trying to gather up information. I am pretty sure that I have two roosters... I am going to post some pictures in that category but for now my question is>>>> Can I eat fertile eggs? If so when I get them from my coop, in the morning how do I store them and will the baby chick stop growing. I don't want to crack open an egg one morning and find a little feathered friend. I would feel horrible and I don't think I would ever be able to eat eggs again...
 
If you pick up your eggs right away and don't let hens sit on them, put them in the fridge and they won't develop. They are no different from non-fertile eggs in taste and usability.
 
I eat fertile eggs everyday. It is perfectly fine. . . In order for you to actually eat a baby chick, the egg would have to be under exactly 99.5 degrees with adequate humidity for over 4 days.
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It takes 21 days for the chick to fully mature in an egg, granted both those variables are still occuring. . .

So you're perfectly fine! All you'll eat is a normal egg with a little extra present left by the rooster. Sounds gross, but you cook the egg anyway. . .
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I eat fertile eggs every day. I just gather the eggs every day. There's no difference in taste or texture and nothing special you have to do to the eggs. I heard of some people picking out the white cords in the eggs because they thought it was rooster sperm (it's not.)

Unless you have a broody hen, the eggs won't start to develop unless you incubate them. Even if you do have a broody hen, collecting the eggs every day will keep them from developing.
 
I work out and have 2 eggs every day before the gym and I am in perfect health and all my eggs are fertile.
 
Most of the time the hen will just leave the egg anyway. If left, they'd rot. The only time they'd develop into anything is with consistent warmth from a hen willing to sit on it or an incubator. I gather mine once a day and set them on the counter. They're good for a couple of weeks like this. They are fertile and I eat them. I know they are fertile, because of my extremely active lover of a rooster and because I can see a difference in the tiny white dot on the yolk. The eggs are delicious and taste exactly the same if they were NOT fertile.
 

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