Chickens are called chooks.... mostly in the UK and AU.Not sure a 'chook' is an actual thing
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Chickens are called chooks.... mostly in the UK and AU.Not sure a 'chook' is an actual thing

Not sure a 'chook' is an actual thing, well here in the savage west anyway.
I've always called chickens "chooks" because it sounded cool. Chooks means chickens though... right?Chickens are called chooks.... mostly in the UK and AU.
Chickens are called chooks.... mostly in the UK and AU.
Certain areas of those places and just lack of wanting to type out the actual word.UK, AU... and BYC.com
... I like to say chooks on here sometimes... shorter to type and ... I dunno ... why not?
A lot of people will see that white-ish spot in their eggs and assume that it's fertile. But a fertile egg will have a white-ish ring with a dot in the middle of it like in this picture here. Yours are not fertile.
Nobody said there was any thing wrong that.Ain't nothin' wrong with that.![]()



That's normal. The bullseye (If fertile) Would be in the white spot. Although I will admit it took me a lot of squinting and zooming in on the picture..Her original pic of the yolk certainly looked like it had a bullseye. White spot with a light halo around it. At least that's what I see. But I am getting older and my eyes getting worse.
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There's the guilty Baby Daddy! That black rooster with the mahogany cape and saddle feathers behind the buff !View attachment 1613968 All eggs, even infertle ones have a white dot. Yours doesn’t look bastocyst-y enough to me... that said, My Orpington didn’t start laying till 24 weeks, and she doesn’t stand as upright as yours... just wait it out, or give it a week of incubation
