I heard a new one yesterday

Man o man, am I glad I ain't the first born. I'm second.
lol.png
 
Before I got chickens I asked EVERYONE if I needed a rooster - including people who had chickens. No one knew and it isn't in any books. Why? Because you obviously don't.

My thought (not growing up with chickens) was that a rooster might be necessary to stimulate their hormones to ovulate. Obviously not, but what did I know?

My dad, who grew up raising Rhode Island Reds in the Bronx during the depression, set me straight.
smile.png
 
Yucky stuff, huh? Well, I've eaten every first egg from my pullets and didn't notice anything yucky at all. Whoa, maybe I ... I know I have odd tastes, but.... ya think I been eating yucky stuff?

(I don't eat cooked cauliflower, cooked broccoli, cooked carrots or cooked cabbage, but I like all of 'em raw. Maybe I can't tell what is yucky and what isn't.... I THOUGHT I could!)
 
I too had the same argument with a friend of mine who is a high school teacher. He was positive you needed a rooster for a hen to lay an egg. I explained to him if that was true, at an egg production facility, somebody would have to go around to each of those tiny little cages and slip a rooster inside with the hen everyday and then take him back out. He thought about it for a second or two and then said "oh, i guess thats right". I got a good chuckle out of it!
 
Quote:
Heh. Made me chuckle. But then I'm a second child!

Well of course I should think that, I'm the fourth. Whew, they got it right with me finally! (just don't talk to my older brothers and sisters, ok?)
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom