I have some (okay, many!) eggs in my fridge that I think are past being good to eat. Is it safe to break them open, compost the insides, and rinse out the eggshells to give to the girls? Do I need to bake them in the oven?
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Personally I would bake them. But I bake mine anyway because it makes them easier to crush and less sticky.
Nor scientific about it. If I use the oven for baking or cooking dinner I put the bucket of eggshells in once I turn the oven off.What temperature do you bake them at?
Nor scientific about it. If I use the oven for baking or cooking dinner I put the bucket of eggshells in once I turn the oven off.
So I guess the eggshells go in at 350 or 425, depending on what I made to eat, and then cool down from there.
That's not true. Eggshells can provide all the extra calcium a hen needs, and in fact that's what birds do in nature and that's what farmers did throughout history, before fancy modern feeds were invented. People inland wouldn't have had access to oyster shell before it became widely available as a commercial product in a bag. This very popular warning that shells on their own are not enough comes from the calculation that if you only use your own chickens' shells, over time they'll develop a deficit simply because some calcium is used by the body for other purposes, so what they put out as new shells is a little less than what they took in. BUT, that's if you only feed them their own shells, not if you feed shells in general. If you buy eggs in the winter when the hens slow down or stop, you can save those shells and build up a stash to pull from later. As long as the hens have an unlimited supply of shells, that will be all they need in terms of extra calcium.Just be aware that recycled egg shells are an excellent supplement, but can't provide 100% of a layer's calcium needs. Either provide it as a supplement with layer feed or use egg shell + oyster shell + all-flock feed.