The need pie. Hay is not good so fly and tip your waitresses please women
Yes. Some you need to keep warmer than others, depending on the breed, but they all need to stay warm.
Any
Barn eggs are a term used for eggs found outside the regular nesting boxes and often cannot be determined how long ago they were laid by the hen. Some farms allow the hens to "free range" inside the barn on a farm where they are relatively protected from predators and sheltered from inclement weather. Most hens will lay their eggs in nesting boxes but sometime they will lay the egg in any old pile of hay or straw and are often not found for days or weeks after.
Older birds do not lay peewee eggs. Young hens and smaller breeds of hens lay the peewee eggs and the older the hen, the larger the eggs are. Hens tend to lay more eggs in the spring and summer.
no hens doo lay eggs like shazaa we all noe that thre is no such things as aliens
All eggs have yokes, this is the nucleus of the cell. However, hens lay eggs without fetuses inside when the eggs are not fertilized by a male rooster.
Four hens have the potential to lay four eggs but this is not always the case. Old hens will eventually stop laying eggs, sick hens may not lay any eggs and hens even in prime condition may be molting or may just be a slow laying breed. There are many reasons why four hens may not even lay one egg in a single day.
on sitting on them Hens on a farm lay eggs into straw and the hens sit on the eggs until they hatch. Hens in large chicken farms do get to have such a luxury. The chickens' eggs are kept under heat until they hatch.
All hens lay eggs.
Hens are mom chickens and roosters are dad chickens. Only mom chickens, hens, lay eggs. They lay eggs all year.
There is no such thing as a "boy hen". Hens are female chickens.
Hens lay eggs, the ones you eat.
Barn eggs are a term used for eggs found outside the regular nesting boxes and often cannot be determined how long ago they were laid by the hen. Some farms allow the hens to "free range" inside the barn on a farm where they are relatively protected from predators and sheltered from inclement weather. Most hens will lay their eggs in nesting boxes but sometime they will lay the egg in any old pile of hay or straw and are often not found for days or weeks after.
Yes, hens can lay eggs for 2-3 years.
Feather coloring does not influence the color of the egg laid. The breed of the hen dictates what color her eggs will be.
Most hens prefer a quiet dark area to lay their eggs. Free range hens will often return to the roost to lay an egg. They will sometimes seek out any available hay stack. If nesting boxes are provided when the hens are young they will usually go anywhere you put the boxes.
No. They prefer to make a nest out of something but they will use any material to nest in. Material like wood shavings,straw,ground corn husks even shredded newspaper. The preferred materials are straw and wood shavings as they are absorbent and easier for the farmer to change and dispose of. Hens will drop an egg just about anywhere if nothing else is available.
no hens doo lay eggs like shazaa we all noe that thre is no such things as aliens
Yes some hens do lay green eggs.The araucana chicken lays green eggs.