dont use anything permannent. I would use chalk or wax.
Yes, chlorine can kill frog eggs. It is important to avoid exposing frog eggs to chlorine or other harmful chemicals to protect the health of the developing embryos. If frog eggs are in an area treated with chlorine, they should be relocated to a safe environment.
Fresh eggs are best for baking and poaching, as their whites hold together well. Old eggs are better for hard-boiling, as they peel more easily when they are not as fresh. Both fresh and old eggs can be used for frying and scrambling.
Reptile eggs are soft-shelled so that the babies can break out of the shells. Bird eggs are hard-shelled, because baby birds use their beaks to crack the shells of their eggs, but since reptiles don't have beaks to use to break their shells, their eggs have to be soft-shelled.
[object Object]
Hard to tell if you do not collect daily. Any suspect eggs should be given the "float" test. Floating eggs are bad/stale/unusable. If the eggs are for your own use just crack them in a bowl first and check that they are good.
The end of the sentence that strong feeling. what should we use mark?
You can use ingredients like applesauce, mashed bananas, or flaxseed mixed with water as substitutes for eggs in cookies.
No you should only use a question mark.
go for it ... use a hammer
You should use three bowls when separating eggs so that you can put whites in one, yolks in another, and the the third is to break the eggs over. You should always break and separate eggs over a 'neutral bowl' so that if you have a bad egg, or you get yolk into whites, you can correct the problem before adding the yolk and whites to their respective bowls.
A Pencil
pencil
There is disagreement about this. It most depends on what you use your hen for. If you use them as incubating machines, then no (she might not go broody as often). If you are selling hatching/eating eggs, then yes, it should be discouraged.
you should. Most cupcake recipies say to.
A Pencil
Eggs Benedict traditionally uses poached eggs. Eggs Florentine may use poached or shirred eggs.
You can candle them to check for development. Mark those with dark spots indicating they are viable and date them. If after 21 days there is no change they are garbage. If you candle and see nothing, then they were not fertile eggs and should be discarded.