Selling eating eggs. What prices do you charge?

Eggs that have not been washed and have been stored in the fridge can last a LONG time. At the polar ice stations, the first night there, they have an egg dipping party. They take dozens and dozens of eggs and dip them in wax or oil, and then keep them for 4 months or so. And those are just washed store eggs.

I would have no problem eating an egg of mine that was clean and had been refrigerated for 8-9 weeks. Anything older I'd probably feed back to the hens. I won't sell eggs that are more than a week, week and a half old, though. My customers are paying high prices for fresh.

There is a proper way to wash eggs. Here is information from the Vermont Extension Service:

# Wash eggs before you put them in the fridge. Never cool eggs rapidly before they are cleaned. The egg shell will contract and pull any dirt or bacteria on the surface deep into the pores when cooled. Try to keep the temperature relatively constant until they are washed.

# Wash eggs as soon as you collect them. This helps limit the opportunity of contamination and loss of interior quality.

# Wash eggs with water 10 degrees warmer than the egg. This will make the egg contents swell and push the dirt away from the pores of the egg. If you have extremely dirty eggs, a mild detergent approved for washing eggs can be used.

Never let eggs sit in water. Once the temperature equalizes the egg can absorb contaminants out of the water.

# Cool and dry eggs quickly after washing. Store eggs, large end up, at 50-55ÉF and at 75% relative humidity. If eggs sit at room temperature (75ÉF) they can drop as much as one grade per day. If fertile eggs are kept at a temperature above 85ÉF for more than a few hours the germinal disc (embryo) can start to develop. If fertile eggs are kept above 85ÉF over two days the blood vessels of the embryo may become visible.

If eggs are stored properly in their own carton or other stable environment they should hold a quality of Grade A for at least four weeks.
 
My normal daily routine is When we fed in the morning we check for eggs. If there are any we put them in the egg basket and it normally sits on the counter all day. We check periodically all day for eggs. Once we get all that day we either wash them with a wash cloth depending how soiled they are and let air dry. then put in a carton and in the fridge they go. Sometimes it will be the next day before they get washed. If this is the case they either get left on the counter or basket and all goes in the fridge. They never go beyond the next day before they get washed. never in hot water. Warm water only. If I happen to be washing dishes at the time and I have a particularly soiled egg it will get washed after the dishes with the dish cloth and rinced off immediately and set to dry. I never use any chemicals other than dish liquid and it is uaually what is on the dish cloth already. I never add it to the egg.

These eggs right now are for our own personal use or for relatives looking for free eggs. I usually give them away if we have more than what we will use. When I start seling I will use better methods. I always print off what I find in this site for future reference. I want to do it right. And I don't want to make anybody sick either. I have learned alot in here.
 
I get $2 a dozen out of my eggs! They are finally starting to pay for feed too
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$4 a dozen here in Northern California! Personally I believe you should be able to charge quite a bit more than the grocery stores factory eggs. I don't have a large flock but I have no trouble selling my extras
 
When my pullets ever start laying, hubs says they will cost $43/doz.
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Seriously, with only eight chickens and eight in my family (includes my son, dil, and grands) I will probably have just the right amount of eggs. I do enjoy reading everyones posts though!
 
The eggs we were getting at the store were a little over $4.00 per 12. The lady I use to by from got $2.00. A lady close to me get $2.50. I tried hers but most were so small. the doc I get mine from now is $2.00. I just don't see how you can even pay for feed at that. I would gladly play $3.00 if asked to. Come to think of it, why not pay what the store wants for fresh ones.? You get a much better egg.
 

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