Now this is cute!

   / Now this is cute! #1  

HRS

Gold Member
Joined
Feb 22, 2005
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397
Location
Georgia
I went up to my feed-n-seed a week ago, and I had my 4-year-old with me. So we came home with these. /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
 

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   / Now this is cute!
  • Thread Starter
#2  
Three total!
 

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   / Now this is cute!
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#4  
Just like the others, colored. I think they color the eggs before placing them in incubator and they hatch the color of the egg. They also had green, orange, and I think light blue. Two of the three are still with us, and they are now growing their real feathers. What little pets they have become.
 
   / Now this is cute! #5  
hope they don't do what my kids chicks did way back when. They turned into mean old ankle pecking roosters that started crowing at 4 am. They do clean out the bugs though.
 
   / Now this is cute! #6  
Wouldn't dying the eggs be toxic? And is that why you only have two instead of three? We shouldn't be messing with mother nature.

David
 
   / Now this is cute! #7  
Come on you guys. No one really believes the egg shell color has anything to do with the feather color. If that were true, all white shell eggs would produce white chickens and brown shell eggs would produce only tan colored chickens. Do cardinals hatch from red eggs???

For those of you that may be squeamish, stop reading now. Think of a little chick and about 1/2 cup of diluted liquid dye (cost=$0.10). Insert chix in dye or spray with dye. Your choice. Blow dry chix. Sell dyed $0.29 chix for $1.59.
Repeat again with next chick. The 1/2 cup of dye probably does 20+ chicks.
 
   / Now this is cute! #8  
Shhhh.... I was just getting ready to sell them some cows that give chocolate milk... /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
   / Now this is cute!
  • Thread Starter
#9  
As strange as it sounds, I was not trying to pull anyone's leg. I've always heard that their color was somehow administered while still in the egg. If you have ever dealt with chicks, you know that they die easily. Straying them with water and then blasting them with hot air would be catastrophic to just about any. Here is a quote I found in a paper. I've provided the link. Maybe it will work.

"Although brightly colored eggs are a tradition on Easter, brightly colored chicks and ducklings are popular with some families. The birds' feathers are colored by dye administered before they hatch. After a few weeks, their normal plumage will return, and they'll look like any other chicken or duck." The Brownsville Herald

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/ts_more.php?id=70267_0_10_0_C
 
   / Now this is cute! #10  
Where's PITA,those biddies could have a complex /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
 

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