Last year we paid £1 for half a dozen. This year people are selling them between £1.30 and £1.50.
Wish my pay went up 30% - 50%.
Wish my pay went up 30% - 50%.
Bird flu and farmers having to kill off thousands of birds at a time has been the driving force behind US egg prices.There's some bird flu / kill the chickens lunacy kicking off in the UK at the moment, although I get the idea that the government are getting the finger on that one. We'll see. Could mean egg shortages in the big cities coming up though, so silly prices perhaps.
Sadly, the whole bird flu thing is based on computer modelling - and we know how crap that is. Let nature run its course, I say, and the strong survive. It's not as if they can take the wild bird population into account, so they probably exclude that. Who knows? BS, I imagine.Bird flu and farmers having to kill off thousands of birds at a time has been the driving force behind US egg prices.
We pay $5 a dozen, which is cheaper than store-bought. But, back when eggs were only $1.80 a dozen, I was paying $3 a dozen for home grown eggs.
Sadly, the whole bird flu thing is based on computer modelling - and we know how crap that is. Let nature run its course, I say, and the strong survive. It's not as if they can take the wild bird population into account, so they probably exclude that. Who knows? BS, I imagine.
I can buy a dozen large sized organic eggs for $5, so they’d have to be less than that, and still organic, otherwise I’d have no incentive.
Yeah but my eggs from the store aren’t commercial. They roam a farm. I shop at a regional chain. There are only 7 stores and their whole gig is organic local stuff. You can still buy stuff that is grown far away, like pineapples but if it can be grown locally it is. So their eggs, produce, meat and dairy all comes from local small farms that align with their ethos. The free eggs my neighbor gave me from one of these DIY people were wretched, they probably feed them cheap feed. I’m sure there are better examples, even tastier than the ones I get from the store. But for now $5 and the assurance of non GMO grain being fed to organic chickens , I reckon I’m content. The yolks have nice deep color and they taste decent.An organic chicken sits in a cage in a huge barn with millions of other chickens and eats food with no additives.
It’s sort of like an organic banana.
Non caged chickens aren’t backyard chickens, but those have to be allowed some freedom to peck and scratch outside.
A backyard chicken is as much a pet as my three girls. They scratch outside from morning till dark. They eat the best grade of chicken feed, have unlimited clean water, gravel and calcium shell. Their roosts and beds are clean. There is no profit motive, just the thrill of collecting eggs.
I never wash eggs. I can tell which one of my three girls laid the egg by sight, but I don’t grade eggs.
All commercial eggs are good or they’d not be cleaned, washed, graded and sold.
But a backyard egg inside looks like eggs from Mammy’s chickens.
When she died, I was too young to understand death or Judgement Day.
About a month afterwards, my father was gathering eggs and I slipped away and went down where Mammy and me buried the dead chickens.
My father was frantic until I answered him and he came down and asked me, what’s wrong?
I said I thought maybe Mammy might be down here with her girls.
My Daddy said Mammy is waiting for you, in heaven.
When a backyard chicken dies, it gets a funeral.
I personally had a disappointing experience with eggs a few years ago . My mom gave me a dozen that her friend raised & they were not good . They had tough shells that broke the yoke every time I cracked them . They also tasted gamey . Not sure if they were laid by geriatric hens , but it kind of turned me against non- store bought eggs .
On the price question , pay what they charge . Don't ruin the event by haggling..............
What I’ve not seen since I was a kid is a flock of Guinea birds
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Guinea fowl - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Guineas were noisy and aggressive, roosted in trees, and were kept as watch animals and to eat tics in the yard. Their eggs are small and gamier than backyard chickens.
Sometimes my father would take me way down in Spout Spring Hollow in Cedar county, where the roads weren’t graveled and the folks lived in shotgun houses covered in tar paper. They seemed to always have a yard full of guineas and some peacocks, and very few chickens like we kept.
I asked my father why, and he said they didn’t have good fields to raise grain to feed them, and all kinds of animals would come in from the tall timber to eat the chickens.
They kept the peacocks to warn the guineas to take to the trees.
Raise your hand, if you’ve ever heard a peacock scream.![]()
