Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
OMG what nonsense I can read here!Just curious if anyone else has had or knew someone else who has had a bi-sexual chicken? I have a Hen+- that has laid a few fertilized eggs and sometimes tries to crow. Anybody? Should I call Ripely's?
Crowing hens do happen sometimes.Just curious if anyone else has had or knew someone else who has had a bi-sexual chicken? I have a Hen+- that has laid a few fertilized eggs and sometimes tries to crow. Anybody? Should I call Ripely's?
Well I see now posting here was a mistake, it WAS an honest question. I shall retract it. She was laying eggs that had a red spot/Vien and/or the dot that in any other egg, makes them fertile. No I don't have a rooster, since this bird is a cross I'm guessing it's just a freak of nature. I think I will just put a few of the "special eggs" into the incubator and see what happens, after all that's where she came from. Thanks for the entertainment.Just curious if anyone else has had or knew someone else who has had a bi-sexual chicken? I have a Hen+- that has laid a few fertilized eggs and sometimes tries to crow. Anybody? Should I call Ripely's?
If you mean a spot like a bit of tissue, then that's a meat spot. It's nothing but a bit of meat from the reproduction tract that gets swept along into the egg as its made.Well I see now posting here was a mistake, it WAS an honest question. I shall retract it. She was laying eggs that had a red spot/Vien and/or the dot that in any other egg, makes them fertile. No I don't have a rooster, since this bird is a cross I'm guessing it's just a freak of nature. I think I will just put a few of the "special eggs" into the incubator and see what happens, after all that's where she came from. Thanks for the entertainment.
No need to retract your question. Since you DO have a hen that crows, it was certainly reasonable to ask about her!Well I see now posting here was a mistake, it WAS an honest question. I shall retract it.
A red spot does not tell whether an egg is fertile. It can happen in any egg.She was laying eggs that had a red spot/Vien and/or the dot that in any other egg, makes them fertile. No I don't have a rooster, since this bird is a cross I'm guessing it's just a freak of nature. I think I will just put a few of the "special eggs" into the incubator and see what happens, after all that's where she came from. Thanks for the entertainment.
All questions asked in good faith are most welcome here. It's how we are able to share interesting information and everyone often then learns something they didn't know before.Well I see now posting here was a mistake, it WAS an honest question. I shall retract it. She was laying eggs that had a red spot/Vien and/or the dot that in any other egg, makes them fertile. No I don't have a rooster, since this bird is a cross I'm guessing it's just a freak of nature. I think I will just put a few of the "special eggs" into the incubator and see what happens, after all that's where she came from. Thanks for the entertainment.
Wrong again!I'd like to address the post by @ikoCRO . No, it is not nonsense that all living creatures on this planet are capable of sexual overlap and gender fluidity. Documented famous gay penguins https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_and_Silo are definitely not nonsense. What is nonsense is that sexual diversity among humans is some sort of moral issue. It's simply how a human (or animal) is constructed during gestation along with eye color and general skeletal build.