Mamagoose777
Hatching
- Mar 5, 2023
- 4
- 2
- 4
Hi!
I've been on this site frequently but just joined so I could ask a specific question. Has anyone else noticed a major decrease in fertile eggs? Our hens have had a total of four roosters, some are young, right at a year old. One is our old reliable, but who is getting old. Our duck hens have a total of three drake's. All in their prime It's spring and the males have been REALLY busy.
I had over ten dozen chix and duck eggs accumulated over a month to scramble and freeze for dog food yesterday. I had a good opportunity to see each one as it was added to the cooking pan. Out of the ten dozen there were only four individual eggs that were fertile. We were trying to clear out the older eggs to ensure fresh eggs for the incubator. But seems hardly with the effort with so few fertilized eggs. I did just read an article that Tyson just replaced all their roosters for low fertility.
Our birds had been eating nature's best organic but, b/c of inflation/economic challenges, we changed to producer's pride from tractor supply. We noticed the same decrease egg count others wrote about, but attributed it to the weather. We have never had this problem before. I'd love to hear any suggestions anyone else may have or knowledge to share.
Thank you for your time
I've been on this site frequently but just joined so I could ask a specific question. Has anyone else noticed a major decrease in fertile eggs? Our hens have had a total of four roosters, some are young, right at a year old. One is our old reliable, but who is getting old. Our duck hens have a total of three drake's. All in their prime It's spring and the males have been REALLY busy.
I had over ten dozen chix and duck eggs accumulated over a month to scramble and freeze for dog food yesterday. I had a good opportunity to see each one as it was added to the cooking pan. Out of the ten dozen there were only four individual eggs that were fertile. We were trying to clear out the older eggs to ensure fresh eggs for the incubator. But seems hardly with the effort with so few fertilized eggs. I did just read an article that Tyson just replaced all their roosters for low fertility.
Our birds had been eating nature's best organic but, b/c of inflation/economic challenges, we changed to producer's pride from tractor supply. We noticed the same decrease egg count others wrote about, but attributed it to the weather. We have never had this problem before. I'd love to hear any suggestions anyone else may have or knowledge to share.
Thank you for your time
