How much for eggs now?

Wild birds have been the main ones spreading the Avian Flu. That's why most people that have their own chickens have been covering their runs and not letting them out quite as much to forage. The main thing is chicken feed and their water, not letting the wild birds access it.

Yes I know, but having everybody keep chickens now will make the risk shoot through the roof. I mean, if you don't want this pest to stop, that's a good way.
 
No they don't. They will start laying at 6 months old and when they are 2.5 years old their prime egg laying days are over and it is off to the chicken nugget house.
They will continue to lay eggs well beyond 3 years old but their production drops by half as they get to be 6 or 7, so they don't fit well in the industrial egg laying model of max egg production.
They might be 2 to lay he XXXXL eggs but they start at 6 months with normal size eggs.
In the US nobody really sells anything smaller than large eggs at retail (medium are rare, small are specialty for 30+ years)

The type of chickens laying eggs outside a farm market setting are not similar to what you are used to or familiar with.

Antique chickens would many times start laying eggs at 4 months, these multipurpose chickens laid eggs that aren’t considered marketable .

If industrial layers start laying at 6 months they again won’t lay many eggs marketable to retail at that point, which is why so called liquid eggs should be the same price now as years ago. (Bad eggs usually go into all sorts of industrial crap)

Bird Flu gets problematic at 6+ months already which kills your production and raises costs.

Your point however is taken, F consumer preferences, grow pullets, sell little eggs and small chickens.

Small eggs 99 cents a dozen, large $8 let the market decide.

Could do this but industrial farms are so specialized they probably literally can’t handle pullets and small eggs.

Roosters oddly are more resistant to bird flu, could grow them for meat and soup stock but most are destroyed because they are harder to raise and lack the breast meat everyone expects, good thighs, wings and legs though, lower fat which might upset some.
 
A few years back, Kroger would have dozen and a half cartons of eggs as a weekly digital deal every few weeks for around a buck.
My, but things have changed.
I'm seeing $6-7 a dozen locally with a high of $7.99.
This is the market's way of telling you that you don't really need to eat eggs.
 
We have chickens and eggs but you can't hard boiled fresh eggs. Can't peel them. Tried all kinds of tricks and nothing works .

I won't eat eggs any other way. Plus I like to get away from the house occasionally.
I punch holes in the air pocket side and boil for 9 mins, then cool in tap water for 10 mins, then peel. Most of the time I can peel them well other than about 1/10 of them. Fresh eggs from the shortage too.
 
Avian Flu just threw some gas on the eggflation explosion.
There are outbreaks of Avian flu pretty much every single year. It has been common in N America for the past 8 years, so it's nothing new. More birds were culled in recent years (can't recall which, but between '21 and '23) vs 2024.
 
I'm not defending her response, but a quick Google search reveals she was raised on a family farm, and received a degree in Agriculture from Texas A&M before she became a lawyer. You, sir, would be incorrect.
You'd think she would know what's needed to raise chickens in your backyard then.... How many cities (where the vast majority of people live) don't allow chickens to be raised ? What about people who live in apartments ? It's easy to say "raise your own chickens for eggs" for a news byte when in reality, it's not even close to practical.
 
Trader Joe's had its store brand of large eggs for $3.49/dozen in central Virginia yesterday, which was $2 cheaper than even Walmart, Lidl, and Aldi. Customers were limited to one dozen. But Trader Joe's is distantly related to the Aldi stores.
 
I'm boycotting eggs I have been for the last 3 and 1/2 months. I refuse to pay over $4.50 for a dozen eggs.
I think it's just another tactic to keep the common man down and broke.

They ask high prices for the eggs and as long as they can get it they'll keep taking it from us.

Boycott, eggs don't have long shelf life and chickens don't live more than a few years.
 
I'm boycotting eggs I have been for the last 3 and 1/2 months. I refuse to pay over $4.50 for a dozen eggs.
I think it's just another tactic to keep the common man down and broke.

They ask high prices for the eggs and as long as they can get it they'll keep taking it from us.

Boycott, eggs don't have long shelf life and chickens don't live more than a few years.
So they are killing their laying stock just out of spite?
 
$1.24 at Walmart by me:

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