Show off your Peas!

Seeing the difference between the egg yolk and the albumen don't matter. Or at least I don't pay attention to that difference I only look for the spot that tells me the egg is fertile.
 
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Seeing the difference between the egg yolk and the albumen don't matter. Or at least I don't pay attention to that difference I only look for the spot that tells me the egg is fertile.
You can't see that through the shell. If for some strange reason you can, please, take a picture of it and post it here.

-Kathy
 
I think he is seeing meat spots
wink.png

There is no way to tell if a freshly layed eggs is fertile without comprimising the egg, if there were the hatcheries would be all over this , they be over run with female chicks and making scrambled eggs out of the males.
 
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I think he is seeing meat spots
wink.png

There is no way to tell if a freshly layed eggs is fertile without comprimising the egg, if there were the hatcheries would be all over this , they be over run with female chicks and making scrambled eggs out of the males.

I just know I'm going to regret asking this, but What the h. is a meat spot?
sickbyc.gif
Even sounds gross.
gig.gif
 
 
I think he is seeing meat spots ;)  
 There is no way to tell if a freshly layed eggs is fertile without comprimising the egg, if there were the hatcheries would be all over this , they  be over run with female chicks and  making scrambled eggs out of the males.



I just know I'm going to regret asking this, but What the h. is a meat spot?  :sick  Even sounds gross.  :gig


You ever crack open an egg and see something that's not an embryo, I think that's a meat spot, but not sure what causes them. :D

-Kathy
 

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