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Ah, geez. Someone on FB posted a picture of a dark brown, a brown and a white egg, then the eggs cracked open and cooked on a plate to illustrate racism. I said, yep, that's true, and it also goes to show that folks who think white eggs or brown eggs are superior are fooling themselves, that there is no difference inside. Of course, someone had to challenge me, saying he felt that colored eggs were richer tasting. So, I had to play the chicken breeder card, geez, going through it all, that the color of the shell is only due to the breed of the hen, but commercial farms generally use only Leghorns for white eggs or red sexlinks for brown eggs and feed them only commercial feeds. I said that blue or green egg layers are never on commercial production farms so those hens may have a better diet and produce better, healthier eggs. The richness of the egg is due solely to the diet of the hen, nothing else. I said that I breed chickens, raise rare variety Brahmas and heritage line Plymouth Rocks, and have a smattering of other breed older hens from former groups who lay brown and green and blue eggs. They free range and eat greens and lots of bugs and other animal protein, hence the better tasting egg. There is zero difference in the inside of an egg from breed to breed except for the diet of the hens. It has nothing at all to do with shell color or chicken breed. I'm sure he'll come back and tell me I'm full of poop, but he didn't know who he was talking to, that he ain't telling me anything about chickens. Yeah, I get a little bit of attitude when folks try to correct me about chickens! 
And to my nephew who wants a few chickens "if they won't die on him", we said that's up to you if they die or not, if you take proper care of them or not. And he just got a dog, too. Nope, I'm going to have to tell him that I don't sell laying hens, I only sell breeding pairs, quads, etc, etc, never just layers. That should get me out of that situation and also, it's true. Me selling Lizzie and Tessa was extremely rare. I'd keep those two troublemakers here before I'd have let them go to some chicken newbie to learn on.

And to my nephew who wants a few chickens "if they won't die on him", we said that's up to you if they die or not, if you take proper care of them or not. And he just got a dog, too. Nope, I'm going to have to tell him that I don't sell laying hens, I only sell breeding pairs, quads, etc, etc, never just layers. That should get me out of that situation and also, it's true. Me selling Lizzie and Tessa was extremely rare. I'd keep those two troublemakers here before I'd have let them go to some chicken newbie to learn on.