Following the mink debacle, we have 32 hens left. On average they give us 21 eggs each afternoon that we pick up. The birds roam around all day long out in the pasture, scratching through cow patties for bugs and worms and "recycled" grain. They'll chase june bugs and other critters that creep, crawl and fly. They eat clover and other grasses.
Long about mid-morning, they'll make their way to the hen house and lay their eggs. You can always tell when they've laid because they sing a little song as if they are proud of their accomplishment. I'll have to record it one day and post it. It is a lot prettier than the shrill, loud cry of the rooster as he exerts dominance over the flock.
We produce a good number of eggs and we eat a good number of eggs each day. "It's power food!" one of our customers said. Still, we went to the feed store and bought 3 brown eggs:
They aren't for eating. Not for us, anyway. These are chalk or ceramic eggs. When I gathered eggs the other afternoon, the very last ceramic egg in the laying boxes was gone. For every ceramic egg that goes missing, that means there's a dead or dying snake somewhere.
You see rat snakes (we call them chicken snakes) get into the hen house often and eat eggs. When they are in the barn, I let them go as I am more than happy with them seeking out and eating rats. But when they start eating our eggs, that's where I put my foot down. I put a ceramic egg in the laying boxes closest to the little patch of woods. The snakes slither into the hen house, curl up in the box and have themselves an egg breakfast. Except, when they eat a ceramic egg, they develop a massive case of constipation and end up dying from the blockage. Sometimes, we'll find the skeleton and the ceramic egg and we're able to use it again.
What I've learned to do is before I put them in the boxes, I'll get a marks-a-lot permanent marker and put a stripe around the egg. The ceramic eggs look so much like a real egg, that I'll tend to pick them up. They don't crack on the edge of the black cast iron skillet! The snakes or the chickens don't seem to mind the black stripe, but it really helps us out.
Here's the nest with some good old country eggs along with the "snake bait" egg. You see what I mean? It looks so realistic. The stripe really helps.
We're coming into prime snake season as it warms up, so we'll watch to see how long our striped eggs last. A ceramic egg costs as much as a dozen real eggs cost. I've heard a golf ball works just as well, but I kind of like supporting our local feed store and the eggs have a more pastoral feel than a golf ball does. Beware serpents! Things aren't always what they seem...
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