Wow, lots of you have kept much better track of what you have spent on your chickens. We don't know the exact cost of our eggs. While my husband was extremely ingenious and used mostly things lying around here to construct the coop, he did have to buy some lumbar and some hardware and a few other things. We also got waterers for when they were little chicks and then had to work out a system for them as big birds, and of course we have invested in their food and lots of little things along the way. We paid 50.00 for our flock of what is now 18 (as chicks) at the feed store.
We find we like buying them treats like flock blocks and sunflower seeds and I also enjoy giving them things like veggie ends and stale bread, leftovers we didn't get to eat, freezer burnt things, unpopular dishes, etc, that otherwise would have made me crazy to throw away because of the waste. I feel that is turning trash into eggs. I also love them eating the bugs. I haven't used their poo as fertilizer yet, but I'm throwing it in my compost pile over the winter to use in the spring so I'll have to let y'all know about that next year. But fertilizer is not cheap and the store is far away. Chicken poo is real close. All these things are hard to measure especially with the price of gas.
They have been extremely entertaining and what, after all, do people pay for entertainment these days, especially when it is good clean fun (except possibly the behavior of my roo)? Everyone in the family enjoys them and I have teenagers, so that is quite a feat to find something we can all do together like this and isn't measurable. I find that my elderly mother loves hearing my chicken antic stories and the people who get my eggs think I have the best eggs in the world, so alot of good comes of it. the 85 year old, the 13 year old and me the 50 year old all laugh at the something simple like feeding them a few grapes or a bowl of rice.
I used eggs as Christmas gifts this year in the baskets I gave away and everyone absolutely loved them. What a conversation starter! I decorated the cartons in some cases or put them into something creative. I found this extremely easy to do and it was so well received I hope I can do it again every year. Something that makes Christmas shopping so much easier for me is certainly of value as well. So alot of things about chickens are hard to measure in a per-egg price. The eggs are different and it is hard to compare them with those bland white things from the store other than you can make omelettes with both.
The longer you keep chickens the cheaper the eggs are so we hope they can pay for their layer pellets is our goal in selling some of the eggs.