- Thread starter
- #11
- Mar 28, 2017
- 2,062
- 5,134
- 427
Ow.
Did you open it? I'm half expecting it to be a triple-yolker!
That would be awesome, I will open it and take pics, probably a video too see it being opened and all that....
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ow.
Did you open it? I'm half expecting it to be a triple-yolker!
Ooh! Yes! A video would be cool!That would be awesome, I will open it and take pics, probably a video too see it being opened and all that....
The boring truth it was just a large yolk and lots of eggwhiteI occasionally get monster eggs. Some are double yolks. Some are a single yolk with a large amount of white. Never had an egg in an egg yet. Open it and see.
So it truly was a huge massive egg! Not a double Yorker or double egg but an honest huge egg. Nothing boring about that!The boring truth it was just a large yolk and lots of eggwhite
...by one of my hens, Easter egger, normally they lay small to medium sizes
The other day I look up to see Brownie crouching amongst everyone making funny noises. I examine her and see the lips of the vent turning inside out like a pouting lip and her noises are strained pushes, a gloved examine has confirmed an egg bound hen.
After a warm soak, I spray the vetericyne gel there and leave her be, a couple hours later I'm back to repeat the soak but this examine shows a normal vent.
I look around the run and find this.....
View attachment 1772668
Compare it to their regular size egg...
View attachment 1772669
No wonder this poor girl was suffering... just thankful it all turned ok
Sounds like you need bigger breadI had a double yoke last year that was bigger than our duck's eggs. It was so big i had to fold it over twice to fit on a piece of bread for a fried egg sandwich.
In the US, yes. I'm 50 and don't recall ever having a kitchen scale growing up. Everything was measure cups and spoons. My ex MIL never even used those. She had a teacup she used for flour and corn meal, used tea and soup spoons for small measures, and guessed the rest.not even in the kitchen? has the trend for recipe measures in cups and spoons done away with them?