How do you pull that off...do you really know which hen laid which egg??
You have a very cool thing going, great marketing, and great skills to be teaching your daughter and at the schools. Either she's tiny girl or that cockbird is HUGE....Beautiful! Kudos great post.
Now, do you keep meticulous records as to costs and sales ...or not so much?
My DD's 5'4". Our English orps are jaw-dropping HUGE. (Especially the lav & blk/lav splits. Hens are about 9-10lbs)
We can tell the diff hens' eggs by their eggshell color & shape. It helps that we have 10-15 hens and not 50. We also have a mixed flock, but purebred orp roo. The 3 new orps who hatched last summer are tricky since they just started laying, so for now, they just get "orp" written on the egg. The neighbor kids LOVE the bantams, so they're always picking out the cute little eggs. I guess it's a specialty market, and I doubt I'd ever sell them otherwise. LOL
When DS was 3 he insisted on only eating HIS chicken's eggs. We always let him pick out his breakfast egg and laughed about it until the day we ate out at a restaurant. He asked for a hard-boiled egg. When he took a bite, it fell from his mouth & he began to cry, saying, "I wanted a REAL egg." That's when I realized he had never eaten a store egg. The waitress brought him another & we got to experience the same but louder & more intense reaction. He's 8, so I now get to remind him of his egg tantrum every time we go out to eat.
We keep very detailed candling & hatching records. (Mostly because the hatchings are usually part of a sci experiment.) We also separate the incubator eggs at lockdown into little "chick jails", and then leg band or mark the chicks with food coloring/Crayola marker after hatch. When someone buys a chick, they know the exact time/day of hatch as well as the individual parents.
I do not keep very detailed records of costs & income. It's more of an envelop system. We have a pet budget that also includes 2 100+lb dogs. The chicken envelop earns enough to feed the flock & the dogs, plus I like to use a little of it buy a new fruit tree or bush or a few perennials each year. The dogs are now 11 & 10 years old, so the dogs' vet bills can no longer be covered by the flock. ( If I included the coop cost, there would only be loss. LOL)
If you count my time, I'd lose money on teaching at the schools. It's a labor of love. Before I had my own kids, I used to hatch every year in my middle school sci classroom. Each grade had a diff focus. I miss teaching, so it's one way I can give back. I have a lot of fun with the little ones and enjoy their questions & stories. Think of it as "chicken therapy" but with a lot of words. Most suburban kids have never seen a chicken. You'd be surprised how many people think that a rooster is needed for a hen to lay eggs or the confusion over simple terms like chicken, hen, & rooster.
My classes often start out with a conversation like this:
What's a chicken?
a chicken lays eggs
So does a hen lay eggs?
yes, a hen is another name for chicken
Well is a rooster a chicken?
No because he doesn't lay eggs.
