Ask at any local feed and grain store. Most farms buy from the same outlet every week and get to know the owners and workers of the grain stores well, in turn these folks know who has what available. On-line fertilized egg orders can be made any time and eggs for hatching can be sent via the post office. In the spring of every year Day old chicks can be ordered from these same outlets or local hatcheries.
Well, if you are talking about a normal chicken egg then yes you can. You can buy a fresh egg or you can get them from a supermarket/grocerie.
Maybe the Bantam egg
a chicken egg is about 50g :)
yes because the chicken is inside of the egg.if the chicken wasnt it would be called just an egg
It depends on the kind of chicken you buy. Most labels will say "organic" or it will say USDA organic on it. Most chickens that you buy at the grocery store have been fed hormones to make them larger before the are butchered.
the egg because dinos lay eggs
seagull's eggs are about the size of an average chicken egg to 2x the size.
From an evolutionist's point of view, the egg came first. A chicken, by definition, must be born from an egg. The egg does not have to be a chicken's egg however. The egg could be layed by an avian that is very similar to a chicken, but which is not a chicken. A small mutation in the genes produces the chicken offspring, which in turn lays eggs to produce more young.
The Chicken!!!! If it was the Egg who sat on the Egg for it to hatch?? Nobody so... God made the Chicken FIRST!
a chicken? its like the question: what came 1st, an egg or a chicken.
either the egg or the chicken came first. of course, god couldve put an egg on the earth, and it couldve hatched into a chicken, or the chicken couldve came first and hatched an egg...
The egg, 1st of all because there were eggs long before birds, but if you mean a chicken's egg then it is still the egg. This is because when a new species evolves, the egg is say, given birth to a sub-chicken, and the new species (chicken) is inside the egg, which is techically now a chicken's egg.