Bog Myrtle & Peat

Life and Work in Galloway


First Egg

The first of many - (I hope)
The first of many – (I hope)

It was with no small amount of delight and triumph that I found my first grey partridge egg of the year this morning. Although it looked a little small, research online has shown that it is within the average expectations for a partridge egg, weighing around 14g (the average is 14.1g). I must admit that I am extremely pleased to have got this far with a species which does not have the reputation of being the easiest to keep in captivity.

We had a great deal of rain last night, which has flooded some of the pens and made all of them extremely soggy. The pens that I built for my partridge pairs has a dark, enclosed area for laying, but this egg was lying out in the middle of the run, covered in mud. Looking inside the enclosed area, I can see that something resembling a nest had been built and then flooded out, so I wonder if the egg was laid out in the open as a result. I took the egg out and cleaned it, then built a new nest in the enclosed area on a drier piece of ground and placed a plastic dummy egg in it. Ideally, I’d like to train the birds to lay in the enclosed area so that the eggs are safer and easier to access.

I took this egg out of the run because it was lying out in the open, but I don’t know whether to take the real eggs out and replace them with plastic eggs as and when they are laid or whether I should wait for an entire clutch to be laid before taking them. As always, suggestions are welcome.



One response to “First Egg”

  1. You generally find that a young female in the first season like any pullet lays smaller eggs initially, as she continues the eggs may increase slightly in size.

    Plus most greys are kept in raised wire laying pens above the ground rather than directly on the floor.

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