Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 54

Price of Eggs

| Off Topic Discussions

Hybrid View

bigburtchino Price of Eggs 08-24-2015, 06:05 PM
submarinepainter I have several guys I can by... 08-24-2015, 07:25 PM
matador We raise a couple of... 08-24-2015, 07:43 PM
DakotaRog I think I've showed pixs that... 08-24-2015, 07:49 PM
bigburtchino It was only that first dozen... 08-24-2015, 08:02 PM
matador We had some birds that would... 08-24-2015, 09:58 PM
NHscrapman I would say 1 in 10 around... 08-25-2015, 05:40 AM
hobo finds $2.49 a dozen yesterday 08-25-2015, 08:30 AM
bigburtchino Hobo - I would be happy to... 08-25-2015, 09:48 AM
ryanw $10/ 3 doz flat for cage free... 08-25-2015, 11:37 AM
bigburtchino ryanw - What the price per... 08-25-2015, 01:05 PM
ryanw I'm not sure, they definitely... 08-25-2015, 01:09 PM
DakotaRog Nationally, a "typical" egg... 08-25-2015, 03:34 PM
Mechanic688 When our grocery has them on... 08-25-2015, 04:22 PM
bigburtchino I had forgotten what a good... 08-25-2015, 04:28 PM
directrecycle we have a few hens left and... 08-25-2015, 05:12 PM
DakotaRog Yeah, burt we can only hope... 08-25-2015, 07:56 PM
Scrappah I think the store bought eggs... 08-27-2015, 03:57 PM
directrecycle Its nothing for us to go... 08-27-2015, 04:42 PM
bigburtchino I do miss having fresh game... 08-25-2015, 08:31 PM
eesakiwi Ted Nugent? We have... 08-26-2015, 02:35 AM
Yunkman On the farm here we haven't... 08-27-2015, 04:20 AM
DakotaRog YM- Have you mink proofed... 08-27-2015, 02:25 PM
sawmilleng We see lots of double yoke... 08-27-2015, 05:06 PM
DakotaRog I like seeing all the weird... 08-27-2015, 07:37 PM
bigburtchino Buying the cage free eggs... 08-29-2015, 12:34 AM
NHscrapman minks are quite rare to see... 08-29-2015, 04:28 AM
DakotaRog Man, I think fishers are... 08-29-2015, 05:24 PM
ryanw I remembered this thread when... 08-29-2015, 05:37 PM
bigburtchino Ryan - That's more like what... 08-29-2015, 05:46 PM
NHscrapman Nope never taken a fisher as... 08-29-2015, 07:07 PM
gorven I guess Im lucky being in a... 08-30-2015, 05:47 AM
bigburtchino I started this thread for a... 08-30-2015, 06:06 AM
Otto I suspect that the small... 08-30-2015, 06:34 AM
charn Egg factories may give the... 08-30-2015, 07:16 AM
DakotaRog Just to finish the hijack of... 08-30-2015, 08:39 AM
DakotaRog Maybe Robert Kennedy, Jr. ... 08-30-2015, 08:24 AM
bigburtchino Rog - Yes lots of chess being... 08-30-2015, 03:19 PM
EcoSafe If we stopped financing ca.s... 08-30-2015, 06:10 PM
bigburtchino This thread about the price... 08-30-2015, 11:26 PM
bigburtchino The Humane Society of the... 08-31-2015, 12:32 AM
EcoSafe I just want to add, [I] loved... 08-31-2015, 12:01 PM
bigburtchino Can you tell I don't like any... 08-31-2015, 06:30 PM
DakotaRog The Humane Society of the US... 09-01-2015, 09:34 AM
hobo finds $3.69 a dz now 09-01-2015, 11:04 AM
EcoSafe Looks to me like the HS has a... 09-01-2015, 12:27 PM
bigburtchino The Humane Society of the... 09-03-2015, 12:50 AM
Abuilder My twist on this already... 09-03-2015, 10:28 AM
Thecamokid the more and more I look... 09-21-2015, 08:52 PM
DakotaRog My bro & SiL have mostly... 09-22-2015, 02:44 PM
DakotaRog C. Dream- Some folks in your... 10-14-2015, 12:13 PM
hobo finds With the falling scrap metal... 10-14-2015, 04:06 PM
NHscrapman As a breakfast cook for many... 08-26-2015, 03:19 AM
eesakiwi I know of a kid who thought... 08-27-2015, 03:33 AM
  1. #1
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts

    Price of Eggs

    Where I live (So. Cal.) price of eggs have doubled in last year. Two reasons: 1. Bird flue outbreak 2. Cage size restrictions Law. I quit buying eggs at the grocery store three months ago. I buy them from a friend, he owns a coin shop locally and has a small organic farm out in the country. I bought groceries yesterday, eggs were $4.85 per dozen. I bought a dozen from my friend $3.00 a dozen today, organic free range (not raised in a cage). I keep telling my GF, I'm going to get my own chicken. I really can't as my city passed a ordnance banning chickens two years ago. It was funny when I first bought a dozen of the organic eggs, GF wanted to know why they were brown. After she tried them, she decided they were better and OK (so glad to hear that). Even happier she hates to grocery shop!

    The price of eggs is just another example of special interest groups (lobbyist) and politician passing laws, without concern or care about the rest of us!


  2. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by bigburtchino:


  3. #2
    submarinepainter's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Sep 2011
    Location
    Maine
    Posts
    1,026
    Thanks
    1,230
    Thanked 654 Times in 316 Posts
    I have several guys I can by fresh eggs from! they are the best
    Old dogs care about you even when you make mistakes;
    God bless little children while they're still too young to hate

  4. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by submarinepainter:


  5. #3
    matador's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    We purchase laptop computers and many components for greater than scrap value. We offer a shipping reimbursement program.replies

    Member since
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Big Wonderful Wyoming
    Posts
    2,309
    Thanks
    1,782
    Thanked 3,174 Times in 1,435 Posts
    We raise a couple of chickens. The eggs are the best.

    Coloring depends on the breed. No big deal, there. Honestly, I have to throw ketchup on the store eggs to make them taste like anything. There's definitely no substitution for the real thing....
    More than Scrap Value Shipment Tips: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...tml#post242349

  6. The Following 8 Users say Thank You for This Post by matador:


  7. #4
    DakotaRog is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
    DakotaRog's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    1,611
    Thanks
    602
    Thanked 1,672 Times in 829 Posts
    I think I've showed pixs that my bro and SiL have about 25-30 chickens. They've been up to 3 dozen before and when they're all producing, they get about 2 doz eggs a day. Now they're down in numbers and in the summer" doldrums"--birds coming out of molt, older birds slowing down in laying so they're down to about a doz eggs a day with about 22-25 hens. They're going to get some semi-grown pullets soon instead of raising chicks so they can get their egg count back up fairly fast.

    I have about a hoaf a dozen steady customers at work. I've just raised the prices for the first time in 3 years up to about $3 a dozen. Several SD cities are fairly progressive about back-yard birds. In Sioux Falls, a person can have 6 but no roosters. Brookings, which is a university town, also allows chickens in town. But not my uptight anal-retentive bedroom town. I knew a gal who had 3 hens in the triple garage and her neighbor ratted her out and she had to get rid of them. Dam commies...

    Here's bro with some of his birds a couple winters back.


  8. The Following 5 Users say Thank You for This Post by DakotaRog:


  9. #5
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts
    It was only that first dozen that had all brown eggs, most are brown but we get white ones too! I have so much fun kidding my GF. Did you know white eggs come from white chickens and brown eggs from the brown ones? Chocolate and strawberry milk? so glad I do the shopping! You gotta love a city girl (I do) they do other things.

  10. The Following 2 Users say Thank You for This Post by bigburtchino:


  11. #6
    matador's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    We purchase laptop computers and many components for greater than scrap value. We offer a shipping reimbursement program.replies

    Member since
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Big Wonderful Wyoming
    Posts
    2,309
    Thanks
    1,782
    Thanked 3,174 Times in 1,435 Posts
    We had some birds that would lay both colors.

    When I was a child, we had about 400 chickens at one point. Let's just say that our basement was nothing but refrigerators. There's some fun in a couple of birds, but the nine year old version of me got real sick of seeing eggs for a few years.

  12. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by matador:


  13. #7
    NHscrapman's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Jan 2013
    Location
    new hampshire
    Posts
    1,584
    Thanks
    4,066
    Thanked 2,171 Times in 939 Posts
    I would say 1 in 10 around here has chickens. any that sell roadside are around $3 but more often than not people give or trade them away as they get too many too eat.
    Living deep in the woods the are not the easiest to care for bears, coy dogs, hawks, eagles, foxes all prey on them.
    bears especially.. if there hungry ain't much you can do besides hope you wake up to the commotion and run out and "try" to scare them off... to save the flock.
    Never raised them myself but have helped in all parts from eggs, raising chicks, feeding, catching runaways and turning them into meat. It's another man vs nature not a matter of if the flock will get wiped out but when, any here that raise them have started over countless times.
    Growing up I had a friend who got into all sorts of crazy breeds of chickens..some were ugly as heck but some were very majestic and quite beautiful creatures. I'll never forget the eggs from him, open the dozen and they were every size and every color eggs some spotted and multicolored...
    fresh eggs always taste better than the store...yumm, now all I need is some bacon which we slaughter in october.
    There ain't nothing wrong with an honest days work. Anyone who says otherwise is a fool.- Old Man

  14. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by NHscrapman:


  15. #8
    hobo finds's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor


    Member since
    Nov 2010
    Location
    tucson, az
    Posts
    4,756
    Thanks
    6,022
    Thanked 5,902 Times in 2,551 Posts
    $2.49 a dozen yesterday

  16. The Following User Says Thank You to hobo finds for This Post:


  17. #9
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts
    Hobo - I would be happy to pay $2.49 that was about same price here a year ago, before bird flu and cage law. I don't think the bird flu is as much to blame for high prices in Cal. as there is no outbreak here. It's the cage law, requiring egg producers to change how they raise chickens in Cal., there has always been a large poultry industry here. When I first bought my home here (20+) years ago, there was one of the largest egg producers in the nation 1 mile from my house. Chickens and cows are gone replaced with houses and shopping centers.

  18. #10
    ryanw's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Oct 2012
    Location
    TX
    Posts
    1,314
    Thanks
    527
    Thanked 1,289 Times in 647 Posts
    $10/ 3 doz flat for cage free eggs at the farmer's market here.

  19. The Following User Says Thank You to ryanw for This Post:


  20. #11
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts
    ryanw - What the price per dozen at the grocery stores near you? I'm reading that prices in Bay area are will over $5 per dozen. That's a fair price $3.33 per dozen for cage free eggs.

  21. #12
    ryanw's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Oct 2012
    Location
    TX
    Posts
    1,314
    Thanks
    527
    Thanked 1,289 Times in 647 Posts
    I'm not sure, they definitely went up for the basic dozen. I want to say they are 3-4 per dozen. The cage free options are 6+ in the store.

  22. The Following User Says Thank You to ryanw for This Post:


  23. #13
    DakotaRog is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
    DakotaRog's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    1,611
    Thanks
    602
    Thanked 1,672 Times in 829 Posts
    Nationally, a "typical" egg only farm selling to grocery stores chains before bird flu had a million or more laying hens in their operations. If you didn't have 250,000 birds at least you had a hard time competing for this market because the margins were so thin. That's one reason you've seen the great rise in very small egg producers, the mega barn layers just weren't producing as good of tasting eggs or people were scared of diseases and other health issue. Interesting note, my SiL on the wife's side and a friend of mine won't eat fresh free-range eggs because the vibrant yellow-orange yolks freak them out (as well as the eggs being fertilized).

    The number crunchers & cartographers at the USDA have gone and combined all poultry/egg sales market value in their most recent census of ag (2012 and 2007) so I had to go back to 2002 to get a map of just laying hen numbers. Some of the counties that are lite up with lots of dots represent just a farm or two of industrial egg layers. I suspect the map has changed some this year...

    http://www.agcensus.usda.gov/Publica...0Inventory.gif

  24. #14
    Mechanic688's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Warsaw , Ind. In the heart of the lakes, and down the street from the hotel where Al Capone stayed.
    Posts
    9,571
    Thanks
    11,207
    Thanked 10,684 Times in 4,711 Posts
    When our grocery has them on sale, they are 10 for $10. or a buck a dozen.
    That's for Grade A Large.
    Last edited by Mechanic688; 08-25-2015 at 10:17 PM. Reason: Added more info
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
    If you enjoy your freedom, thank a vet.

  25. #15
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts
    I had forgotten what a good natural egg tasted like, GF who loves eating eggs for breakfast likes the organic/cage free eggs. They are larger, with more yoke and taste better. I know chickens with less stress produce better, maybe the cage law will end up producing a better & healthier industry.

  26. #16
    directrecycle's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    521
    Thanks
    94
    Thanked 465 Times in 225 Posts
    we have a few hens left and are looking to replace the ones we butchered due to no loger laying. we just sent in meat birds to be butchered as well. Chicken is a major staple in our diet. Luckily we dont live in the city/village limits and have free will to do pretty much anything..our county/township is agriculture and livestock based and generally leave everyone alone

  27. The Following User Says Thank You to directrecycle for This Post:


  28. #17
    DakotaRog is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
    DakotaRog's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    1,611
    Thanks
    602
    Thanked 1,672 Times in 829 Posts
    Yeah, burt we can only hope but I doubt other states will follow Cali's lead. But if grocery store eggs stay high, I wonder what fairly cheap protein source will replace them for folks without a lot of cash? Eggs are an easy and quick thing to cook and industrial eggs have traditionally been fairly cheap. Americans overall eat more protein than most people in the world but poorer people eat less and more carbos because carbos are cheap. I see more empty calories eaten to make up for less eggs. Probably not a good deal.

    In good years in the past, when we've had a lot of deer and antelope meat, I used to be able to donate packages that I had done myself. Now food pantries and shelters won't (can't) take any wild game meat unless it comes through a legimate processing place. I suppose someone might get sick sometime even though I obviously eat what I package. Processing a deer isn't cheap anymore so I don't give meat away like that anymore. I donate to "Sportsmen Against Hunger" when applying for the licenses so they pool resources and a guy might get a donated critter processed that way. I haven't tried to make a claim on one of their tickets though but I support the program. Can donate our over abundant "Canada" geese as well...

  29. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by DakotaRog:


  30. #18
    Scrappah is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
    Scrappah's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Jun 2014
    Posts
    1,056
    Thanks
    318
    Thanked 1,416 Times in 674 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by DakotaRog View Post
    Yeah, burt we can only hope but I doubt other states will follow Cali's lead. But if grocery store eggs stay high, I wonder what fairly cheap protein source will replace them for folks without a lot of cash? Eggs are an easy and quick thing to cook and industrial eggs have traditionally been fairly cheap. Americans overall eat more protein than most people in the world but poorer people eat less and more carbos because carbos are cheap. I see more empty calories eaten to make up for less eggs. Probably not a good deal.
    I think the store bought eggs around here are around 2.50 $/dozen. If you figure six meals that's a pretty good deal. Used to eat cereals & grains for breakfast but after a couple of hours on the jobsite i was feeling hungry & run down.Somewhere along the line i started making a two egg " McMuffin" for breakfast and what a difference. My energy level stays up & i don't get hungry till noon time.

    Mentioned it to a friend that's mostly vegan and she explained that it's the protein in the eggs that was doing it.

    It's funny but three of my nearby neighbors have taken up raising chickens over the last five years. Haven't asked them about it but i wonder if part of the reason was a certain feeling of uncertainty about the future. If you've got chickens for protein & a garden that goes quite a way towards feeding the family.

  31. The Following 3 Users say Thank You for This Post by Scrappah:


  32. #19
    directrecycle's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor

    Member since
    Oct 2011
    Posts
    521
    Thanks
    94
    Thanked 465 Times in 225 Posts
    Its nothing for us to go through 2 dozen eggs at breakfast with 8 kids

  33. The Following User Says Thank You to directrecycle for This Post:


  34. #20
    bigburtchino started this thread.
    bigburtchino's Avatar
    SMF Badges of Honor



    Member since
    Mar 2011
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,643
    Thanks
    4,369
    Thanked 2,827 Times in 1,130 Posts
    I do miss having fresh game meat, I have a uncle who goes elk hunting a lot and gives me lots of elk meat.

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

 
Browse the Most Recent Threads
On SMF In THIS CATEGORY.





OR

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

The Scrap Metal Forum

    The Scrap Metal Forum is the #1 scrap metal recycling community in the world. Here we talk about the scrap metal business, making money, where we connect with other scrappers, scrap yards and more.

SMF on Facebook and Twitter

Twitter Facebook