I've been raising chickens off and on for years and I've never encountered this issue.
We have about 8-10 buff orpington hens in with 1 buff rooster. The eggs over the last month or two have been disgusting. I've never had a problem keeping a rooster in with the ladies, but maybe I need to remove him? Here's what we're facing:
We collect daily so the eggs aren't old (I promise. sometimes we collect 2x/day We never leave anything overnight unless we aren't home or a couple girls lay after we collect in the evening);.
We have 1 broody hen that is trying to sit on the eggs, but we aren't leaving any behind.
We leave them on the counter because we normally eat what we collect on a regular (family of 8)
When we crack them, there is no formed yolk. It's runny with blood vessels and a white film in it as if an embryo had already formed.
Sometimes they have an odd smell as if borderline rotten.
I thought my kids might be being careless and not collecting quickly enough, so I took the chore over and we have the same result.
Hens are about 2-3 years old. Fed Non GMO feed, constant access to clean water and multiple shelters. Lay in a nest box about 95% of the time. Heat here in GA has been insane this summer.
Should I remove the rooster and just not have fertile eggs? Deal with the broody hen? Or is there something else I could be missing such as an illness that could affect them?
We're eating old eggs in our fridge that we had put back to sell because 90% of the eggs currently being laid are inedible.
I'll crack one and try to upload a pic. Thanks for reading this novel! I'd appreciate any feedback.
Michelle
We have about 8-10 buff orpington hens in with 1 buff rooster. The eggs over the last month or two have been disgusting. I've never had a problem keeping a rooster in with the ladies, but maybe I need to remove him? Here's what we're facing:
We collect daily so the eggs aren't old (I promise. sometimes we collect 2x/day We never leave anything overnight unless we aren't home or a couple girls lay after we collect in the evening);.
We have 1 broody hen that is trying to sit on the eggs, but we aren't leaving any behind.
We leave them on the counter because we normally eat what we collect on a regular (family of 8)
When we crack them, there is no formed yolk. It's runny with blood vessels and a white film in it as if an embryo had already formed.
Sometimes they have an odd smell as if borderline rotten.
I thought my kids might be being careless and not collecting quickly enough, so I took the chore over and we have the same result.
Hens are about 2-3 years old. Fed Non GMO feed, constant access to clean water and multiple shelters. Lay in a nest box about 95% of the time. Heat here in GA has been insane this summer.
Should I remove the rooster and just not have fertile eggs? Deal with the broody hen? Or is there something else I could be missing such as an illness that could affect them?
We're eating old eggs in our fridge that we had put back to sell because 90% of the eggs currently being laid are inedible.
I'll crack one and try to upload a pic. Thanks for reading this novel! I'd appreciate any feedback.
Michelle