Quitters you take out of your bator - what do you do with them?

scoopy82

Songster
9 Years
Dec 19, 2010
274
1
109
Victoria - Australia!
I've just taken out 10 eggs that were either clear or had blood rings. What do people usually do with the ones that stopped developing? Mine were taken out on day 9 and I was wondering if the clear ones would be alright to cook up as treats for my broodies babies?
 
Hi! The clear eggs, I hardboil and feed back to the birds. The others that are cloudy with anything weird/bacterial possibly growing, have bloodrings, or with embryos that started and stop, get buried.
I candle usually on Day 6 and pull my clear eggs then. Day 9, I'd still be OK with hardboiling and feeding to back to the birds.
Many people seem to be uncomfortable with the practice, but a clear egg is a clear egg.
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Lisa
 
If the egg does not have bacteria growing in it, it will not go bad, even if it is at incubation temperatures. It does not matter if it is developing or not. They are fine to cook and feed back to the chickens or your dog. You can even eat them yourself, but I won't.
 
after 10 days past the due date I used to crack them open to see what happened. But then Some of them made me GAG.
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UGH the smelllllllll! Now I walk down the road and put them in the woods. If the bugs or something eats it, it just seem the natrual order of things. But I am never cracking them open again
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I crack open any quitter eggs to see what was going on in there. I sniff the contents and if I don't smell anything funky, I put the bowl into the microwave to cook the egg, then mash it up and feed to the chickens. If there's a tiny embryo, I'll still cook the, but if it's bigger, it creeps me out and I send it down the disposal.
 
Quote:
Ooooh, I can't stand to see even the bloodring ones cooked because it does make my skin crawl --- too much for me. I don't think it would be harmful for the birds but beyond my 'seeing / handling tolerance'. It's all good protein (she types with a lump in throat).
smile.png

Lisa
 
Quote:
Ooooh, I can't stand to see even the bloodring ones cooked because it does make my skin crawl --- too much for me. I don't think it would be harmful for the birds but beyond my 'seeing / handling tolerance'. It's all good protein (she types with a lump in throat).
smile.png

Lisa

x2
 
I toss them over the fence. I see the flock over them messing with the remains. Tossed a rotten egg the other day. They ran faster back home than they did going.
 

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