Fertilized eggs are available through mail order and also from poultry feed stores. A web search will show hundreds of breeders who will ship eggs. Local area farms will often also have fertilized eggs for sale.
Non fertilized eggs can be obtained from grocery stores, local farmers.
As soon as the male serves the hens then the eggs should be fertilised.
unfertilised. Because they only use hens, no roosters
unfertilised. Because they only use hens, no roosters
Yes and un-fertilised ones too
Yes. Any Animal Needs To Be Mated with, to either give birth or lay eggs.... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Improvement: other then the chicken which doesn't need a male to lay eggs
Yes, but the eggs will not be fertilised and the female will most likely not be broody.
All hens lay eggs.
Chicken eggs are non fertilised however in rare cases some can be fertilised depending on the Hens activity with a cockeral. however in the most case, the hens never see a cockeral and so the eggs are never fertilised. Duck eggs however are fertilised. Ducks, unlike chickens, only lay eggs when they are fertilised. Hence why you may notice that the shelf life of duck eggs in a supermarket are much shorter then those of chicken eggs.
There is no such thing as a "boy hen". Hens are female chickens.
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.
Hens are mom chickens and roosters are dad chickens. Only mom chickens, hens, lay eggs. They lay eggs all year.
Eggs from battery hens, i.e. hens that are kept in cages (known as batteries) where several hens live together in one cage. These hens cannot roam freely as free-range hens can.