Hens eggs have been colored for years as decoration and even fine works of art.
Some breeds of chicken actually lay real colored eggs. Easter egg chickens, Americana and Araucana breeds lay eggs ranging from colors like dusty rose, lavender, green and even gold.
Yes Aracuana chickens can lay eggs with shells in shades of blue and green.
Chickens that lay different colored eggs such as brown, green, blue or pink are no different then white egg laying chickens. A chicken that lays different colored eggs will have different colored skin, but that's it.
Welsummer chickens lay dark brown eggs. If you have a bird that looks like a welsummer but lays white eggs its probably a brown leghorn.
If you mean eggs that are commonly called just "brown eggs", Rhode Island Red is a species that lays brown eggs - and there may be others.
Colored eggs are mostly just sold by small scale farmers. Large scale egg producers don't keep the kind of chicken that lays colored eggs, because they aren't as 'cost-effective'. If you live in a community that has a lot of people with chickens, there's a very good chance that someone has colored-egg laying chickens that sells the eggs. Craigslist is a good place to look, as well as local bulletin boards.
Because they feed their chickens differently idkIt all depends on the chicken that is being used.For example white chickens will put out white eggs while colored chickens will give out brown eggs.
Yes, chickens lay unfertilized eggs.
They are from CHICKENS OR HENS because an egg can not produce another egg. (They are hens not chickens.)
It does not work it will change the egg shell color but not the egg.The shell will have speckled on it but not fully covered.
Chickens, whether the chicken is brown, white, blue, red or, or... all start laying eggs when they are mature enough to do so. The average age for chickens to start laying eggs is 5-6 months of age. You will notice the wattle and comb begin to appear more red than pink as they become more developed and distinct. This is an indicator that the young hen is about ready to start laying. And brown chickens don't necessarily lay brown eggs. It's a common misconception. Brown Leghorns, for example, lay white eggs just as their white colored counterparts do. The color of egg the chicken will lay coincides with the color of the earlobe. A white earlobe = white eggs. Colored earlobe = brown or tinted eggs. Hope this helped!
No, different breeds of chickens lay different colored eggs. White is the most common color in commercially sold eggs, however, local farms sell a wide variety of colors.
What is the pronoun for the chickens lay lots of eggs