The first egg this morning from one of the chickens. I'm pathetically happy ;D
Now, just have to work out a way of dividing it between 3 people.....
Scrambled?! ;D Lucky you! *wishful sigh* wish I could keep chooks.
Envy here as well! I've always wanted to keep hens (sighs and youthful memories) but strictly no livestock on our allotments - except of course the rats, mice, cats, magpies, crows, seagulls etc etc :( Come to think of it - wouldn't be a very safe place for the poor chooks after all ............
Eggcelent!!!
It is great isn't it!! We all had home grown poached eggs on toast this morning for breakfast, yum!
Jerry
One tip I found out when I kept hens was that very fresh eggs are really hard to get out of the shells as a boiled egg! I know it's not a major scientific finding, but it used to annoy me that the egg white seemed glued to the shell, just wait a few days and they are fine. Just shows how "fresh" they are in the supermarket, that I only found out by keeping my own hens.
Brian
Congrats LB. Must have been a lovely feeling to pick that lovely warm just laid egg, up. Can understand why you are so thrilled.  We are preparing our area but won't get our hens until the Spring probably. Have got my strawberry plants growing there and they are flowering so too late to move. :) busy_lizzieÂ
Congrats on your first egg. :)You must be so proud. Did you thank you chook? I had fresh scrambled eggs this morning courtesy of my neighbour's hens. I notice the shells are thinner than supermarket ones.
Dear Wardy,
I used to give my hens oyster shell grit in a small hopper they could help themselves to. Still got the odd thin one though
Brian
GA  I read these days when looking for chooks in the small ads ( ;D) that they use "fed on no grit or shell" as some kind of virtue. I don't understand. I thought grit and shell for chooks was needed for their wellbeing. Or is it just to harden the eggshells
Yours in ignorance
Wardy
Well in the end we just had them (yes - it wasn't a one off, she did lay another one on Sunday) fried on toast - and beautiful they were too. ;D
Amazingly yellow yolks so feeding chooks greens did work and they stayed perfectly formed in the pan and hardly spread at all.
Didn't know I could speak so proudly about eggs. ;D
Nice one lazybones. We keep Chooks you can do some great barterring with half dozen freerange. A good website for chookkeepers is the river cottage site.
I can see why you're so eggcited! ;)
I want chooks!
Dear Wardy,
I thought the oyster shell grit provided calcium minerals to make the eggs stronger, and the birds need grit in the crop to help digestion, so can't think why "no shell & grit" is a virtue.
Brian
ive wanted hens for ages but now i have gotten a few i have 7 silkies 11 marran chicks about 8 weeks old 10 brown hens ex battery hens oh ye and five 4 week old chicksi hatched out up here in my attic in my home made 10 quid incubator so i think i better stop wanting hens now i think