Margaid
Well-known member
Hi folks, I wondered if anyone on the forum has any knowledge or theories about what determines the size of egg yolks.
My Welsummers are with a mix of other hens - Favarolles, Cream Legbar, Barnvelder, unknown bantam and a Silkie cross (there are also Houdans but I don't get their eggs very often). The Welsummers lay the biggest eggs and the yolks are bigger than all of the others, but there is very little perceptible difference in the size of the yolk in all the other eggs. Even the bantam egg has a big yolk - great for eating but not so good if you want the white to make meringues.
Because the hens went off lay I had to buy free range eggs from my previous supplier. They are quite big eggs, larger than any from the mixed flock except for the Welsummers, but the yolks are small - a lot smaller than the smallest of ours. They are also very pale. I have no idea what these hens are fed on but I'm very curious as to why there is such a difference. The eggs are sold as free range but I suspect the hens may actually be quite restricted i.e. not ranging over the meadows, hedges and garden as our hens do.
Any ideas?
My Welsummers are with a mix of other hens - Favarolles, Cream Legbar, Barnvelder, unknown bantam and a Silkie cross (there are also Houdans but I don't get their eggs very often). The Welsummers lay the biggest eggs and the yolks are bigger than all of the others, but there is very little perceptible difference in the size of the yolk in all the other eggs. Even the bantam egg has a big yolk - great for eating but not so good if you want the white to make meringues.
Because the hens went off lay I had to buy free range eggs from my previous supplier. They are quite big eggs, larger than any from the mixed flock except for the Welsummers, but the yolks are small - a lot smaller than the smallest of ours. They are also very pale. I have no idea what these hens are fed on but I'm very curious as to why there is such a difference. The eggs are sold as free range but I suspect the hens may actually be quite restricted i.e. not ranging over the meadows, hedges and garden as our hens do.
Any ideas?