yea i guess if they are kept warm and are put under the right circumstances
yes you can hatch wild turkey eggs but they must be kept at a constant temperature of 99 degrees and for at least 28 days so if you are planning on it you definitely need a incubator. also it is illegal in most states to remove or have wild turkeys or turkey eggs so check your state laws before you try this or you could be in for some very costly problems
They are a little bigger than a large chicken egg.
99-99.5 degrees Fahrenheit
99 or 99.5
1o inches
No
Sometimes
at least one
Depending on where you keep the egg because they may wrotting but most turkeys lye on thier eggs immediately the finish laying the eggs
Yes. The eggs of a turkey are stronger flavored and richer than chicken eggs. They often have a distinct "wild" flavor and can sometime taste of pine/cedar if gathered from the wild. Domestic turkey eggs do not usually have a bad flavor but they are distinctly different than the egg of a chicken.
it just depends on the breed of turkey. most turkeys lay lite to dark tan eggs with specks of brown on them for camoflauge. now the large whiter domestic breeds like you buy in the store usually lay white eggs.
Birds rabbits roots eggs deer turkey and hickory nuts dinosoars
What financial factors (i.e. revenues, net income) are used to calculate the value of a law firm?
The color of the wild turkey's eggs are white! i dont know where you got that info but i raise turkeys and the only breed i have ever seen lay a white egg is the large white commercial breeds that you buy in the store. all the wild and heritage breeds lay brownish or tan eggs with dark specks all over them.
yes u can but u need an incubator and you need to do exactly what turkey mothers do or else all the eggs wont hatch and they will die yes u can but u need an incubator and you need to do exactly what turkey mothers do or else all the eggs wont hatch and they will die
well there is only 1 species of turkeys know as the "red foot turkey" or the "pendius drevil turkey" but out of all the names they call it a "T.U.R.K.E.Y" know for the spanish name gallo or chicken in englsh
The color of the wild turkey's eggs are white! i dont know where you got that info but i raise turkeys and the only breed i have ever seen lay a white egg is the large white commercial breeds that you buy in the store. all the wild and heritage breeds lay brownish or tan eggs with dark specks all over them.