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Egg Prices

I recently purchased a flat of 5 dozen eggs at Costco. I believe it was about $12, IIRC.

Edit - I just checked, it was about $13.50. So, about $0.225 per egg.

Can confirm, just went this AM and 5 dozen sits at 12.99 at my local Costco, which they have went up some, seems like it was 10 bucks for a long time. I'm sure they aren't the highest quality around, but for the price I'm sure they are good.
 
$4-5 for 12 eggs in western NY .. which i think is alot lol

can u freeze them ? ive never done it .. but wonder what happens to them if you just throw em in freezer and take em out a day before.
I wouldn't freeze, but they really dont go bad in the refrigerator. They can get a little dehydrated but then just add a splash of water. I have had them easily a month or 2 past expiration.
 
I wouldn't freeze, but they really dont go bad in the refrigerator. They can get a little dehydrated but then just add a splash of water. I have had them easily a month or 2 past expiration.

Me too.
I use the "float test". If they float, I throw them out.
 
all in all, i’d say they take up less than an hour of my time weekly and i have 16 happy, healthy birds. it’s far less work than people make it seem.

That's good feedback. I might have to re-analyze this scenario :LOL:
 
My daughter is a farmer and sells cage free, free roaming eggs before covid they were $2 a dozen, now $3.
 
I actually have about 8 ducks instead of chickens and I prefer the duck eggs over chicken eggs. They’re a little bit larger and the yolk is slightly richer. Nice orange color.
 
I actually have about 8 ducks instead of chickens and I prefer the duck eggs over chicken eggs. They’re a little bit larger and the yolk is slightly richer. Nice orange color.
duck eggs are great, but ducks are a much more labor intensive set up, unless you have a pond or lake on your property. plus they’re dirty AF
 
That's good feedback. I might have to re-analyze this scenario :LOL:

chickens were my wife’s idea when we moved to a larger property. i was hesitant at first, but now i love it. we like to travel, and i wouldn’t still have chickens if they were a hindrance on my life at all. if it was free eggs vs not being able to go on a spontaneous weekend trip, those birds would all be sold or butchered.

this morning after breakfast i brought a big bowl of table scraps down to their run, tossed them in, opened the door to their big “free range” enclosure and grabbed a dozen eggs. might have taken me 3 minutes.

My daughter is a farmer and sells cage free, free roaming eggs before covid they were $2 a dozen, now $3.

we sell off excess eggs to our neighbors for $4/dozen.

mostly we eat them all ourselves, but there are times where we find ourselves with a lot left over.
 
duck eggs are great, but ducks are a much more labor intensive set up, unless you have a pond or lake on your property. plus they’re dirty AF

I have a little hard plastic kiddie pool that I buried in the ground in their enclosure and it works great for me 🤷🏻‍♂️ but yes they do shed a lot more feathers than chickens. Luckily for me I’m on a large ranch so my ducks can wander pretty much everywhere when I let them out.

One nice thing I noticed about ducks over chickens is that chickens love to scratch up my garden and make a mess with that. My ducks don’t scratch and less of an issue with them tearing up my garden. I have a big Anatolian/Pyrenees cross guardian dog that hangs around my property as well so don’t ever have to worry about predators having a duck dinner while they’re free ranging.

I would agree that chickens are easier though and in most peoples situations a better fit for their needs.
 
I think I like chicken eggs more but I’ve also been eating chicken eggs for so long it’s maybe just weird if something that looks so similar tastes a bit different?

I'm sure I've tried them, but it's been so long, I can't remember how they taste. Like I mentioned above, I've eaten chicken eggs from my own chickens before, and I enjoyed those.
 
I used to know a lady with an emu farm, but I never got to try an egg.
 
I have a little hard plastic kiddie pool that I buried in the ground in their enclosure and it works great for me 🤷🏻‍♂️ but yes they do shed a lot more feathers than chickens. Luckily for me I’m on a large ranch so my ducks can wander pretty much everywhere when I let them out.

One nice thing I noticed about ducks over chickens is that chickens love to scratch up my garden and make a mess with that. My ducks don’t scratch and less of an issue with them tearing up my garden. I have a big Anatolian/Pyrenees cross guardian dog that hangs around my property as well so don’t ever have to worry about predators having a duck dinner while they’re free ranging.

I would agree that chickens are easier though and in most peoples situations a better fit for their needs.
chickens will scratch and dig everywhere. that’s definitely true. you either need to keep them in where you want them, or out of where you don’t want them.

mine have a 20x8 fully predator-proof run, and then a 60x60ish fenced in pen in a wooded area of my yard that i let them into most days.

they don’t have any access to my lawn or my wife’s garden.
 
Eggs around $4-5aud which is like $3usd. That's free range blah blah

I guess we finally get something cheaper than America!
 
Excuse me while I go make an omelet ..........
 
Eggs are going up again. That’ll surprise a few chickens.

(currently £2 for 12 large free range eggs. Not much more if you want organic. Duck eggs are a little more expensive but they’re only an occasional treat for me).
 
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