It Glows!!!!

New adventure

Songster
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Last evening at nearly dark, I was looking in the run for any eggs that were "misplaced" when my flashlight beam hit an egg that seemed to glow in the dark.
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It squished when I picked it up, but oh, so carefully, I carried a perfect, shell-less egg into the house and scared the c##p outta my DH when I handed it to him! It was priceless!
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Here's a shot of it (on left) with the light shining thru:




and one without


This is the first one I've ever seen, it's really cool!
 
Wow! I have never even heard of that happening before --

How exactly does that happen?

Thank you for sharing your find and for the totally cool photos!
 
Quote:
Someone on here explained it once as like a car going through a car wash. As the yolk travels through the plumbing layers are "sprayed" on. Yolk, albumen, membrane and finally shell. A shell-less egg travels through the last phase of the cycle too quickly and so misses the final shell coating (or there's not enough free calcium in the body to produce the shell).
 
That's a really cool pic New Adventure! I remember the first time I reached for a shell-less egg. It really startled me!
 
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Quote:
Someone on here explained it once as like a car going through a car wash. As the yolk travels through the plumbing layers are "sprayed" on. Yolk, albumen, membrane and finally shell. A shell-less egg travels through the last phase of the cycle too quickly and so misses the final shell coating (or there's not enough free calcium in the body to produce the shell).

I learned something new today! Thank you!
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I had two hens that had the eggs scared outa them from a lightning bolt nearby! It was obvious that they weren't intended to lay them, because they were the first eggs not to be layed in the nest box
 
Quote:
Someone on here explained it once as like a car going through a car wash. As the yolk travels through the plumbing layers are "sprayed" on. Yolk, albumen, membrane and finally shell. A shell-less egg travels through the last phase of the cycle too quickly and so misses the final shell coating (or there's not enough free calcium in the body to produce the shell).

That's a great explanation! Now I can explain it better to my granddaughter (my #1 chicken wrangler).

Has anyone eaten any of these? I think the dogs might get mine for breakfast tomorrow. Its starting to leak, so it's not a good show-n-tell anymore. It was fun for the kids to examine!
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I didn't let them throw it tho, mean old nana that I am.
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