No they a born live.
Eggs do not have a life span but a chicken stays alive for about 7-15 years.
To get golden eggs your chicken has to love you, the more it likes you the better chance you have to get a golden egg.
No. Unless the egg is fertilized and incubated it is simply an egg. Life does not begin until the germinal disk has begun to grow. Eating an egg is not "killing" a chicken. The collection of materials within an egg has no life until all conditions are optimum for life to begin.
By its mother laying eggs.
It keeps conditions ideal to support life, whether it's chicken eggs or human infants.
Yes they do we eat caviar which is fish eggs the only sea life creatures which give birth are sharks, whales and sea horses.
I'm going to make a life-size costume of the Evil Chicken, and I'll walk around and throw Evil Chicken's Eggs (eggs with a horrifying face on it) to everyone that is trying to pull my feathers out or makes chicken sounds.
Rhode Island Reds typically live between five and six years. If you want them for eggs, they will start laying at around 6-7 months and produce well for around three years, after which production will start to taper off.
Free range egg is when the chicken is allowed to move around in a filed and have a life. Battery eggs is when the chickens are caged and can not move around and they sometimes get infections.
Chickens are not born with a set amount of eggs. They start producing eggs at around 6 months old and will continue to produce eggs until later in life when egg production declines. The number of eggs a chicken can lay in its lifetime varies depending on breed, health, and other factors.
Yes. Your chicken will keep laying eggs and she will continue to incubate everyone she lays during the process. She stops laying after her eggs have hatched to take care of her chicks. And once the chicks are independent (which doesn't take a few days it may take a month or two) she will start to lay again. A hen usually goes broody if she goes broody at all once or twice during her whole life time.
My family has had Rhode Island Reds that have lived to be 6 years old. I love the large brown eggs they provide for my breakfast table. They can start laying as young as 6 months old.