Raising Chickens 101: Collecting, Cleaning, and Storing Chicken Eggs

February 28, 2012

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Raising chickens for eggs? Let's talk about how to collect, clean, store, and hatch chicken eggs in this fifth installment of our Raising Chickens 101 series.

Once you’ve eaten farm eggs, it’s hard to go back to grocery store eggs. Fresh farm eggs, free-range or not, are delicious, with bright yolks and firm whites. Give your hens ground oyster shell or a similar calcium supplement, available at farm suppliers, for strong eggshells.

Collecting Eggs

You’ll collect eggs every morning; hens cackling loudly are a sign or clue that they’re laying. I usually had another look in the afternoon, as well.

Chickens like to eat eggs as much as we do. Most egg-eaters learn on broken eggs and then begin to break eggs themselves. Chickens are opportunists and will pick at whatever looks edible. If you clean up broken eggs immediately and throw out any “eggy” straw or shavings, you can prevent egg-eating. A chicken that learns this habit can’t be cured, and others may follow her lead. You don’t want the chickens eating your eggs—you want them yourself!

You can tell what color eggs a hen will lay by the color of her ear. Yes, her ear. Birds don’t have external ears like humans do, so look for a small circle or oval of skin on the side of the head, next to the ear hole. If it’s white, your hen will lay white eggs; if it’s red, she’ll lay brown ones. There’s no difference in flavor or nutrition, but white eggs show the dyes more brightly at Easter!

Cleaning and Storing Eggs

Eggshells have a “bloom,” a natural coating that protects the egg from bacteria. Avoid washing if you can; instead, a wipe with a dry, rough cloth.

If the eggs have a little manure on them, you can wipe with a damp cloth for small spots. A really dirty egg can be submerged and scrubbed with a vegetable brush. Always use warm water; cold water will make the egg shrink inside the shell and will draw in bacteria.

Let eggs air-dry thoroughly before putting them away. (I liked to sort them by color, darkest to lightest, but that’s just me!)

Put them in dated egg cartons, and store them in the fridge on a shelf, not the door, where they will get jostled with every opening/closing. For partial cartons, I marked each egg in pencil with the day it was collected. Fresh eggs are good for a month in the refrigerator.

A cooking tip: To make deviled eggs, use week-old or older eggs, not this morning’s. The shells of really fresh eggs stick rather than peel cleanly.

Hatching Eggs

If you want chicks, you’ll need a rooster. As a rule of thumb, 10 to 12 hens per rooster is a good ratio. While you could build an incubator and supervise the development of the eggs, it’s easiest to let the hens take care of hatching.

A hen that is getting ready to nest becomes “broody.” This means that she wants to hatch her eggs. She’ll sit “tight” on the nest and resist having her eggs collected, whereas a nonbroody hen will let you reach under her to collect eggs. A broody hen may even peck or screech at anyone coming near. There are ways to discourage broodiness, but why would you? The hen does the work of hatching and raising, and you get free chicks!

Farm chickens can live 4 to 7 years and lay eggs for most of that time. Every year they go “off-lay” (stop laying eggs) for several months. This happens over the winter, when there’s too little daylight to trigger egg-laying. They’ll begin again in the spring.

Next, I’ll talk about what you might do when your hens go “off lay.”  See when your chickens stop laying eggs.
 

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Elizabeth Creith has fifteen years of experience keeping chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys on her farm in Northern Ontario. She currently dreams of a new flock of fancy chickens. Elizabeth and her husband also have six and a half years experience running a pet store. On top of that, she's kept more animals than you can imagine from cats to cockatoos!

Comments

I have one Americauna hen

By miwin1000

I have one Americauna hen who's shells are paper thin even with oyster shell supplements. Can you tell me what's the problem? If I really beef up her diet with tons of calcium foods, they do get better, but I can't keep up that diet forever...too expensive. I'd rather give her away to a farm rescue I know...Also, I have 6 chicks about 6 weeks old. RRR's. Only 1 is about half the size of the others, and her feathers are coming in much more slowly...she seems fine otherwise. Why is she so small? Please respond by email...

when we decide to have

By NancyHedin

when we decide to have chicks, does it matter the breed of rooster? We have a variety of chickens and wonder does it make a difference?

You'll hear mixed opinions

By Almanac Staff

You'll hear mixed opinions but the breed doesn't matter a lot to the hen. Just avoid mixing extra-small and -large breeds. However, the rooster needs be dominant--so he needs to be old enough. If your hens are mature, we'd say he should be at least a year. Also, you need 1 rooster for every 10 to 12 hens.

I have some pullets and some

By amyrenee9

I have some pullets and some red pullets. How many eggs a year can each kind lay?

First, understand that

By Almanac Staff

First, understand that "pullets" are female chicks who do not yet lay eggs. Most breeds of hens will start laying at 20 weeks (4-6 months of age). The number of eggs depends on the hen. On average, 3 hens should give you 2 eggs a day. So, 18 hens = a dozen eggs per week. Note that some hens will lay more often and some will lay less and you might find a hen that doesn't lay at all.

Great article! I am a first

By kristinricky

Great article! I am a first time owner and this helps alot.

Thanks for a nice helpful

By Anonymousppat

Thanks for a nice helpful article!

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