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<<The eggs we get are all different colors and sizes

and the shells are so much harder than supermarket

shells.>>

 

Just want to point out that my dad's neighbours (he's

not a farmer, but he's surrounded by them) get their

egg shells nice and hard by feeding the chickens

ground up oyster shells. So, it's not a vegetarian

diet for those chickens. I don't know what the

Mennonites use.

 

Liz

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Hi Liz,

 

Well, I can't say what *all* Mennonites use, but I am confident that ones we buy

from here

don't use oyster shells. The chickens are eating what they should be eating;

grass and

bugs. Granted, bugs would make the chickens non-vegetarians, but certainly they

are

part of their natural diet.

 

I have heard of other calcium-rich supplements being added to chicken feed in

order to

strengthen the shells, including calcium deposits from the bottom of the ocean

(which

probably originated from mollusk shells originally?). As I have said before, I

am no

chicken farmer, but my guess is that the harder shells would be the natural

condition of

the egg shells. I would think that the thin ones would be a symptom of battery

cages/

factory farming techniques, just as reduced nutritional profile seems to be...

 

 

Funny, I was just looking on amazon for a book on raising chickens. Maybe I

will soon be

an expert...

 

Best,

Karen

 

 

 

, ERB <bakwin wrote:

>

> <<The eggs we get are all different colors and sizes

> and the shells are so much harder than supermarket

> shells.>>

>

> Just want to point out that my dad's neighbours (he's

> not a farmer, but he's surrounded by them) get their

> egg shells nice and hard by feeding the chickens

> ground up oyster shells. So, it's not a vegetarian

> diet for those chickens. I don't know what the

> Mennonites use.

>

> Liz

>

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To me its not what the hens eat, but if the hens are diseased or not

and this is hard to know, they could be fed the best diet but like my

father in law, his chickens all died of flu without even a sign!!

I believe most, if not all animals are diseased and cannot be thought

of as food and an egg is the embryo of an animal!!

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Hens do lay eggs even if the eggs aren't fertilized, so that's not killing

anybody. Our chickens we had growing up, we didn't eat the eggs because there

were roosters there. The hens never hatched any, though. Our neighbors had a

million or so guineas and they ate the eggs. They were definitely fertilized

eggs, too, and that was sad to hear about.

 

Colin Hammond <nilochammond wrote:

To me its not what the hens eat, but if the hens are diseased or not

and this is hard to know, they could be fed the best diet but like my

father in law, his chickens all died of flu without even a sign!!

I believe most, if not all animals are diseased and cannot be thought

of as food and an egg is the embryo of an animal!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kadee Sedtal

 

Build a man a fire and he'll stay warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll

stay warm the rest of his life.

 

" THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!!! " -Captain Picard, Next Generation, " Chain of Command

part 2 "

 

Check out my new , Classical 2 at

http://launch.classical2/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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