Nature's Easter Eggs

Ranked #640 in Pets & Animals, #17,570 overall

Naturally-Colored Chicken Eggs

Most people never realize that chicken eggs come in lots of different colors, not just brown and white. I call these colored eggs, nature's Easter eggs since it seems like nature decorated them for us already. After you see a few of these colored eggs, it makes those racks of plain white supermarket eggs seem boring. Plus if you have a few of the chickens that lay these already-colored eggs you can have the fun of an Easter egg hunt every day.

Picture via Creative Commons from observing life

Egg Colors

Though it may seem like brown and white are the only shades of eggshells, there are actually quite a few different colors that chicken eggs come in. Eggs may be all sorts shades of blue from sky to baby; green shades from pale, pale mint to olive; pink to pinkish brown; pinkish purple to dark purplish brown, lavender, and some eggs even have speckles.

Diversity Is Fun

Basket full of Eggs by woodleywonderworks

Even though the only difference in colored eggs is the shell, it's fun to collect a variety of colors from your chickens. It makes it feel like Easter every day

Nature's Easter Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from robstephaustralia

Naturally-colored chicken eggs really simplify Easter, no need to dye the eggs, and some chickens will even hide them for you ;-)

Naturally Colored Eggs

Yes, all the eggs on this lens, even the brightly colored ones, are their natural color. They were not dyed to get these shades, these are the color that they were when they were laid.

Eggs-elent Pictures

Loading

Do Colored Eggs Taste Different?

This is a frequent question, and while I think it would be cool if the answer was yes, the truth is there's no difference in taste between different colored eggs. All eggs are essentially the same inside, irregardless of what color their shells are. The same things go into the egg , no matter what color eggs the hen lays. The only difference in taste you might discover is that store-bought eggs, which are usually white, taste much different than farm-bought eggs, which are often various colors. This difference in taste is not due to the color of the egg's shell, it's from the difference in diets between caged, factory raised chickens versus free ranging farm chickens. Color-coded, differently-flavored eggs would be tons of fun though :)

Hunting For Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from woodleywonderworks

These kids get to go egg hunting all the time, not just on Easter.

Various Colored Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from thanker212

Naturally Blue and Green Eggs

Types of Chicken Eggs Video

Understanding Chickens & Eggs : Types of Chicken Eggs
by expertvillage | video info

93 ratings | 65,916 views
curated content from YouTube

Scientific Studies about Egg Shell Colors

Loading

Colorful Collection

Picture via Creative Commons from blmurch

Are Brown Eggs Healthier?

Many people have thought that to be healthy, they had to buy the brown eggs at the supermarket. This is nowhere close to true, and is a waste of money if that's the only reason you buy brown eggs. All eggs are essentially the same inside, no matter what color the shell of the egg is. It's often fun to get eggs of a different color, just for something different to look at, but it in no way affects the healthiness of the eggs. The only thing that affects how healthy the eggs are is the hen and her diet. A wide variety of foods, including grass and insects, will result in delicious and healthy eggs, no matter whether they are white, blue, green, brown, or purple.

Chicken Breeds That Lay Brown Eggs

Some common and not so common chicken breeds that lay brown eggs:

*Australorps
*Barnevelders-some, really dark brown eggs
*Brahmas
*Buckeyes
*Chanteclers
*Cochins
*Cornish-light brown
*Delawares
*Dominiques
*Javas
*Jersey Giants
*Langshans-historically laid very dark, plum-colored eggs
*Marans-some lay dark, chocolately brown eggs
*Naked Necks or Turkens-very light brown eggs
*New Hampshires
*Orpingtons
*Penedesencas-very dark, red-brown eggs
*Plymouth Rocks
*Rhode Island Reds and RI Whites
*Silkies-slightly tinted with tan
*Sussex
*Welsummers-can be dark brown
*Wyandottes

Different Chicken Eggs

Wonderful Brown Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from .j.e.n.n.y.

Eggs-cellently Pictured

Loading

Living In Harmony

Picture via Creative Commons from Frank Jakobi

Chicken Egg Blogs

Egg-cellent source of protein
A hen requires 24 to 26 hours to produce an egg, 30 minutes later she starts all over again. This means the average hen lays 300 to 325 eggs a year. A hen starts laying eggs at 19 weeks of age. The color of the egg is determined by the breed of chicken ...
World Chefs: Backyard chickens inspire new cookbook
By Robin Respaut | NEW YORK (Reuters) - Years ago, Jennifer Trainer Thompson and her family started raising chickens in their backyard in western Massachusetts. A coop and a small flock later, they had more fresh eggs than they needed.
Lafayette residents hope to save chickens
She is one of several residents who feed the chickens and clean their coop in exchange for fresh eggs. "It's nice to see the children all involved," she says about some of the younger tenants who've gone gaga for birds like Nancy, a charcoal-colored ...
Chickens come home to roost
?All these chickens need is chicken cable,? said his wife, Carol. ?They have everything else.? To repay the Pfieffers for their free room, board and meals, the seven chickens lay about a dozen eggs every couple of days. ?We've got beautiful colors.

Do Brown Chickens Lay Brown Eggs?

Certain breeds lay certain color eggs. This is not related to feather color, so there can be chickens that are one color and lay a different color egg, such as the Delaware. The Delaware breed of chickens has a White Columbian feather pattern. Since it's white, most people would think it would lay a white egg. That is not the case. Delawares actually lay brown eggs, no matter what color their feathers are. The Minorca breed comes in a couple of colors, but one of the most common is black. Minorcas lay pretty white eggs.

Feather colors do not show what color eggs the chickens will lay, if that was the case there would be blue and green chickens. The best way to know what color eggs will come out of each chicken is to know what breed it is since certain breeds lay certain colors. It is also often possible to see egg will get laid by looking at the pullet's ear lobe, white ear lobes mean the chicken may be a breed that lays white eggs, red ear lobes mean the chicken may be a breed that lays brown eggs. This is not always true, and still leaves the blue and green egg layers out, so it's best to use it as sort of a basis for a guess.

Pink Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from normanack

Lots of Eggshell Shades

Shirts with Colored Eggs on Them

Easter Egg factory Women's V-Neck Dark T-Shirt

Shirt with a cute cartoon of an Easter egg factory on it.

Price: $26.99 Buy Now

Easter Egg factory Women's Plus Size Scoop Neck T-

Different style shirt with the cute cartoon Easter egg factory on it

Price: $30.99 Buy Now

Organic Cotton Tee

So that's where Easter eggs come from

Price: $29.49 Buy Now

Maternity T-Shirt

"We're Hatching!" shirt

Price: $29.99 Buy Now

Powered by CafePress

Chicken Breeds That Lay White Eggs

There are several types of chickens that lay white eggs. Not all of them are pure, snow white though, some of them are slightly tinted with brown. Chalky, creamy, pearly, and off-white are all good ways to describe some of those plain white eggs.

*Anconas
*Andalusians
*Appenzellers
*Asils
*Belgian D'Anvers
*Belgian D'Uccles
*Buttercups
*Campines
*Catalanas
*Cubalayas
*Dorkings
*Dutchs
*Faverolles
*Egyptian Fayoumis
*Hamburg
*Holland
*Houdans
*Japanese
*La Fleches
*Lakenvelders
*Leghorns
*Malays
*Minorcas
*Modern Games
*Old English Games
*Orloffs
*Phoenixes
*Polish or Polands
*Rosecombs
*Sebrights
*Spanish White-Faced Blacks
*Sultans
*Sumatrans
*Yokohamas

Supermarket White Eggs

If you only eat eggs from the supermarket you have most likely only eaten eggs from one chicken breed. That's because most commercial factory farms raise only one breed of chicken, the one breed that out performs all the others in a factory farm, the white leghorn. Almost every single egg eaten in this country comes from white leghorn hens. White leghorns lay hundreds of eggs a year, one almost every single day from the time they start laying, though they do taper off on laying after their first year, which is the reason poultry farms get rid of their chickens then.

Egg View

Eggs Come In Different Shapes and Colors

Chickens That Lay the Golden Egg

So far, I've never seen gold egg laying chickens, but there is a big call for chicken eggs that are different from the factory-farm, bleached-looking white eggs we all see at the supermarket. Family farms are becoming popular once again, as more people realize fresh and healthy food tastes good and is healthier too. Many people, unable to raise their own chickens for eggs, try to find yummy eggs they can buy for their own families, but in some areas this is difficult to do. This, and the sudden, resurgence of popularity in the keeping of chickens, have combined to make some people, who never thought they'd do such a thing, into chicken-farmers. People raising honest and quality chicken eggs can make a bit of extra money off of a fulfilling hobby, and supply their family with fresh henfruit in the bargain. The eggs may not be golden, but blue and green will do.

Olive, Blue, Green, and Orange Eggs

Where Do Green Eggs Come From?

Green eggs are very interesting. They are actually created by breeding a brown egg laying chicken to a blue egg laying chicken. The colors mix and become green. Some of the prettiest green eggs come from a mixture of the breeds of Ameraucana and Maran.

Green Eggs and Ham

Where would we be on a colored egg lens without adding the classic, Green Eggs and Ham?

Green Eggs and Ham Book & CD (Book and CD)

Amazon Price: $4.62 (as of 05/26/2012)Buy Now

Now your kids can have Green Eggs and Ham too, just by getting a few naturally-colored chicken eggs.

Green Eggs

Blue Chicken Eggs

Blue Eggshell

Picture via Creative Commons from Jannie-Jan

Unlike brown eggs, the color for blue eggs goes all the way through and isn't just on the surface on the shell.

Chicken Breeds That Lay Blue/Green Eggs

There are several chicken breeds that lay slightly tinted, colored eggs, but if you see blue or green eggs, there's only three types of chickens that could have come from:

Araucanas
Ameraucanas
Mixed Breed or Easter Eggers

Ameraucanas, Araucanas, Easter Eggers?

"My chickens lay blue/green eggs, does that mean I have an Araucana or Ameraucana?"

There's always a lot of confusion over the different blue or green egg-laying breeds. Some people think they've got Araucanas, when they really have Ameraucanas. Others think their Easter Eggers are Ameraucanas. It's even more confusing since many feed stores don't even know what they have, so tell people they're buying another breed. Plus, the background of each breed is confused and no one really knows their histories. Luckily for us, the poultry fanciers have come up with criteria for each of the breeds to have before they can be considered Ameraucanas or Araucanas, so we can identify the different breeds.

Araucanas are often called rumpless Araucanas since they have no tails. All they have is a sort of bump for a butt. They also have things called ear tuffs, clumps of feathers by their ears, and the chickens often have a sort of looking-down-their-beaks look. They lay only blue eggs. Araucanas are also fairly rare since they have odd genetics that make a quarter of them die in the shell. You are extremely unlikely to find true Araucanas at a feed store or chick hatchery. If you want this chicken breed, you'll need to find a real Araucana breeder. A good place to do this is a chicken show or an Araucana group.

Ameraucanas are a bit more common than Araucanas. They are becoming popular for breeders to raise since they don't have the lethal gene that Araucanas have, are recognized by the American Poultry Association (so can get shown at chicken shows), and still have pretty colored eggs. Ameraucanas have tails, lay colored-eggs, and have muffs and beards, little clumps of feathers under their chins. They lay blue eggs. They are also rarely sold at feed stores and chick hatcheries, so the best way to get quality Ameraucanas is to get them from Ameraucana breeders.

Easter Eggers are the colored-egg laying chicken that most people have. Easter Egger is basically a nice name for a mutt, or a chicken that has a mix of genetics in it. Since the genes are so dominant, they usually look a lot like Ameraucanas, but will frequently lay non-blue eggs and have slight feature differences such as the wrong comb shape or different colored legs. If your chicken lays green eggs, bluish eggs, pink eggs, or other colors, they are most likely Easter Eggers. Easter Eggers can be just as wonderful as purebred Araucanas and Ameraucanas, but they do not qualify for being show chickens, nor do they always breed true. If you purchased your chickens from a feed store or chick hatchery you most likely have Easter Eggers, mixed breeds with the blue egg gene.

Easter Egger Hens

Araucana

Picture via Creative Commons from sievloet

Freshly Laid Pink Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from Jake Wasdin

More Chicken Information

Want to learn more about chickens or even thinking about getting some yourself? (you should! :) Check out these sites for a whole lot of information.
Backyard Chickens Site
The main section of Backyard Chickens. Find a link to Raising Chickens 101, a beginner's guide to chickens, the Learning Center, and the forum.
Backyard Chickens Forum
Go on, go hang with your peeps at the ultimate chicken forum. Chat about chickens, ask questions, find like-minded people nearby. The forum has information on just about everything, and what they don't have a post on you can ask some of the friendly members for help.
The Classroom at the Coop
Lots of information on this forum as well. Plus, there's some members with great information on genetics.
The Chickens101 Yahoo Group
This group is all about chickens. Talking about them, learning about them, even just being with other chicken enthusiasts.

Blue and Brown Eggs

Picture via Creative Commons from Julian Berry

What Makes Different Color Eggs?

Every chicken lays a slightly different color egg and experienced chicken raisers can often tell which of their chickens laid which egg by the shade, different bumps, and size of the eggs. There is some variation over time as well. New hens, when they just start laying will often have uneven patterns and odd sized eggs, then the color and shape and size will usually even out as she starts laying regularly. When the chicken starts reaching the end of her egg production time or gets stressed, she may lay odd eggs again.

Eggs are colored by the different pigments applied to the shell as they pass through the hen's system. Each type of chicken has evolved through natural or artificial breeding to lay certain color eggs. Each hen of each breed has a different color scheme inside of her which depends on her genetics, and so she will lay certain color eggs according to her breeding. The genetics of egg coloring are very complex and we still don't understand everything about them, so unless the hen is purebred we do not always know what color egg she will lay and even if she is purebred we may not always know the exact shade of color she will lay.

A Rainbow Dozen

Picture via Creative Commons from pshab

Learn More About Chickens

Thinking about getting some chickens or just want to know some more about them? Check out these books. They're full of great information and will fill you in on all the details.
Loading

Nest with Eggs

More About Chickens

Learn more about chickens by checking out my other chicken lenses
Loading

Do You Like This Lens?

If you liked this lens, please consider giving it a thumbs up. Thanks! :)

This module only appears with actual data when viewed on a live lens. The favorite and lensroll options will appear on a live lens if the viewer is a member of Squidoo and logged in.

Add this to your lens »

Bookmark Me

If you enjoyed reading this lens, please consider bookmarking it, Tweeting about it, or posting it to your Facebook/MySpace page to share it with others. Thanks! :)

Add this to your lens »

Bookmark and Share

Leave Your Egg-citing and Colorful Comments

Share your eggs-periences with eggs and give us your opinion on the best colored eggs by leaving a comment. Thanks!

  • FledglingStudio_com May 5, 2012 @ 10:00 pm | delete
    I love the naturally colored eggs! We used to have an araucana that laid green eggs. Now, I mostly eat organic brown eggs.
  • jed78 Apr 13, 2012 @ 5:50 pm | delete
    Wow what a lens , very interesting! I raise a few different varieties and americanas are a major part of the flock.
  • Chandler Apr 2, 2012 @ 12:34 pm | delete
    I have some Ameraucana chicks. Im so excited to get blue eggs!!!
  • whaleriders6 Mar 29, 2012 @ 1:01 pm | delete
    Beautiful, and very informational, lens!
  • bekat Mar 27, 2012 @ 8:10 pm | delete
    One year I died Easter eggs with onion skins and they came out this beautiful brown color, they looked like mahogany eggs. Lovely lens.
  • PoeticChristian Mar 19, 2012 @ 10:56 pm | delete
    very interesting, even as I was a farmer when I was young, I had no idea. Very cool and I am glad I chose to stop by. Great lens!
  • Dusty2 Mar 19, 2012 @ 5:47 pm | delete
    Very interesting lens AlishaV. I have to agree also...Great colorful photos. The different color of eggs together and separately PoP!

    The photo I like most is the brown egg on the edge of the plate in the photo "Wonderful Brown Eggs". Makes you want to pick it up and shake it to see if the egg is real. :-)
    .
    Oh...At least you won't have food coloring or dye all over the kitchen and glasses to clean up after the kids have finished dying the eggs for Easter. Just let nature do it for you! (Instant Easter eggs)! :-))
  • Momsbusy247 Mar 19, 2012 @ 5:28 pm | delete
    Great lens! Its amazing how many colours an egg can be. I did not know this and am so happy that i now do. Great job!
  • ultimapalabra Mar 19, 2012 @ 4:21 pm | delete
    What an interesting lens! I learned a lot. Thank you!
  • otherlleft Mar 19, 2012 @ 2:55 pm | delete
    My local Agway will have several color-option chicks available this year, I'm very excited!
  • HtCares Mar 19, 2012 @ 2:40 pm | delete
    What a great lens. I learned a lot. Thanks.
  • awakeningwellness Mar 19, 2012 @ 1:56 pm | delete
    I always buy my eggs from local farmers but I have never had any color except brown. I love this lens, I didn't even know eggs came in other colors, thanks for the info!
  • mrstwowheeljunkie Mar 19, 2012 @ 1:49 pm | delete
    These are really cool! Great Lens!
  • Lauriej1 Mar 19, 2012 @ 1:39 pm | delete
    Cool lens!! :)
  • Mamaboo Mar 19, 2012 @ 12:31 pm | delete
    I'm so glad I happen to land your page...It was wonderful, informative and just all around fun. My girls got a kick out of it to. thanks and be blessed.
  • SunshineLollipops Mar 19, 2012 @ 12:25 pm | delete
    I loved your lens on eggs. The different colors and shapes are amazing. Natural colors are my favorite... it was fun to learn more about them all. Thanks!
  • JoyfulPamela Mar 19, 2012 @ 11:56 am | delete
    Very cool! My grandparents always raised chickens. I remember the eggs being different shades, but not the diversity that you have pictured. :)
  • Judy_Filarecki Mar 18, 2012 @ 11:42 am | delete
    I just recently got some green and blue eggs from a local farmer. The grand kids were really fascinated by them and wanted to know if I had dyed them. I usually get cage-free brown eggs. One problem I have with fresh eggs is that they don't peel well when hard boiled except the green one which was perfect. does anyone have a suggestion about making fresh eggs peel better?
  • SunshineLollipops Mar 19, 2012 @ 12:28 pm | delete
    I have always heard that the closer the egg was to its expiration the better it peels. So, if you are going to hard boil eggs use the older ones :)
  • LadyCharlie Mar 18, 2012 @ 11:35 am | delete
    I love it...love chickens and their eggs! I didn't know there was so many colors though...wonderful lens! Blessed!
  • d-artist Mar 16, 2012 @ 8:36 pm | delete
    very interesting lens!
  • goldenecho Mar 16, 2012 @ 12:42 am | delete
    I love this lens, and plan to share it! You mentioned that "Eggs are colored by the different pigments applied to the shell as they pass through the hen's system." I wonder why the blue egg color goes all the way through then while the brown only coats the outside (is that the same for pink too? I imagine green might go all the way through since the hens have part of the genes of a blue laying egg). How fun!
  • Rusty-Quill Mar 15, 2012 @ 8:47 pm | delete
    What a fantastic interesting hens, um lens. :) I always thought the color of the egg was determined by the hen's diet - thanks for the lesson.
  • Stinkerbelle Mar 15, 2012 @ 2:43 am | delete
    Thanks for teaching me something new great lens
  • pheonix76 Mar 14, 2012 @ 12:03 am | delete
    Really great seeing all the wonderfully (and naturally) colored chicken eggs you have featured here. :) Thanks for sharing...there's really nothing like farm fresh eggs.
  • alicanas Mar 13, 2012 @ 4:26 am | delete
    thank you
  • TerryBain Mar 12, 2012 @ 3:37 pm | delete
    Very nice. My favorite part of this is the photos. Good good work.
  • mjtaylor Mar 12, 2012 @ 2:02 pm | delete
    Great lens!
  • eilval Mar 11, 2012 @ 12:19 pm | delete
    What beautiiful colors - great lens !
  • VinayVallabhaneni Mar 11, 2012 @ 8:17 am | delete
    Wow, Never imagined that there are many variety of eggs like green, blue. Nice lens
  • AnthonyAltorenna Mar 10, 2012 @ 8:59 pm | delete
    Great lens! We have several Ameraucanas in our small, mixed flock of hens, and they lay greenish and bluish colored eggs. There is nothing better than fresh eggs for breakfast, and our friends really like when we share the extra eggs with them.
  • Septamia Mar 10, 2012 @ 9:54 am | delete
    For the first time learned that the eggs are green, and blue.
    This is no joke and not the miracles Photoshop?
  • mjtaylor Mar 12, 2012 @ 2:03 pm | delete
    Really truly, I have seen these IRL!
  • ferginarg Mar 10, 2012 @ 4:32 am | delete
    Such a pity I live in a city, I'd love to have chickens, I think they're awesome. Great lens, you learn something everyday. Thanks.
  • Mia-Mia Mar 9, 2012 @ 8:09 pm | delete
    I had no idea there were so many colors of chicken eggs. Thanks for the education. Beautiful lens. Liked.
  • TravelingRae Mar 9, 2012 @ 4:01 pm | delete
    These are so pretty. I wish that I liked the taste of eggs. :::blessed:::
  • aesta1 Mar 9, 2012 @ 11:19 am | delete
    I never noticed the various colors of eggs and all these info on types of chicken. I just never knew.
  • snazzify Mar 9, 2012 @ 2:11 am | delete
    blessed by a squid angel :) <3
  • AdrianaCopaceanu Mar 8, 2012 @ 7:16 pm | delete
    You reminded my of one of our chickens a few years back. I didn't know at the time there were such things as green eggs, and imagine my surprise when she laid her first egg: a beautiful shade of green!
  • Koupie Mar 7, 2012 @ 8:21 am | delete
    I certainly learned a lot this morning, great information, great lens :)
  • candleandblue Mar 7, 2012 @ 5:10 am | delete
    Love the blue eggs. My speckled hens lay brown eggs with dark brown small speckles. They taste delicious.
  • brando87 Mar 6, 2012 @ 5:33 am | delete
    I didn't know that chickens laid anything other than brown or white eggs. Very interesting.
  • LazyEasyFun Mar 6, 2012 @ 2:40 am | delete
    wow. I've never seen blue and greennaturelly colored eggs, white and brown - yes, but green ... You've got a beautiful collection here!
  • miaponzo Mar 6, 2012 @ 12:47 am | delete
    Wow! I didn't even know there were chickens that laid colored eggs!!! Blessed!
  • floppypoppygifts Mar 5, 2012 @ 8:03 pm | delete
    What a great lens! super entertaining & informative-best of both worlds!
  • TopicalMD Mar 5, 2012 @ 6:03 pm | delete
    Great lens! I didn't know there were green eggs.
  • cffutah Mar 5, 2012 @ 5:53 pm | delete
    Great article, enjoyed all the detail and photos. *blessed by a squid angel*
  • Close2Art Mar 5, 2012 @ 4:39 pm | delete
    I love the colored eggs, learned a lot too, Blessed***
  • BestGamesQuest Mar 5, 2012 @ 1:57 pm | delete
    Awesome pictures! The green ones remind me of "Ei eggs" that I ate in Norway, that I think are produced by eiderdown ducks.
  • victoriuh Mar 5, 2012 @ 8:53 am | delete
    I grew up on a small farm and my sister and I had to pick up the (differently) colored eggs. It wasn't quite as much fun as Easter though :) Our ducks also had beautiful eggs with lots of green and blue. Something we had laid speckled eggs too. Very pretty.
  • Load More

Want to Know More About Me?

If you want to know more about me, check out my biography or lensography lenses :)
Loading

More About Me

Loading

Check Out More of My Lenses

Loading

by

AlishaV

Hi, I'm AlishaV! I love animals and nature, and teaching others about all the amazing things many people have never noticed around the world.

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!

Get Green Eggs and Ham 

Green Eggs and Ham (I Can Read It All by Myself Beginner Books)

Amazon Price: $4.78 (as of 05/26/2012)Buy Now

Get the Green Eggs and Ham Cookbook 

Green Eggs and Ham Cookbook

Amazon Price: $8.59 (as of 05/26/2012)Buy Now

Learn More About Chickens 

Chickens In Your Backyard: A Beginner's Guide

Amazon Price: $1.83 (as of 05/26/2012)Buy Now