Turkeys lay from early spring to early summer, a span of about 4 months. During that time the turkey will lay 12-18 eggs and then sit on them. If you collect their eggs they will continue to lay, eventually producing an average of 1 egg every 2 days for a possible total of 80-100 eggs. Most people who breed turkeys collect the eggs and hatch them to maximize the number of turkey poults produced.
A turkey hen will lay 4 to 17 tan and spotted eggs at a time. They take about a month to hatch.
One at a time. But about a dozen in a sitting.
They can lay 80-100 eggs.
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15 to 18 eggs
Well, appearently the eggs produced for the first nest are 12.1 average.
If the hen turkey is nesting let her incubate the eggs. If you have a good broody chicken hen let the hen incubate the eggs.
That's a hen.
Yes. The eggs of a turkey are stronger flavored and richer than chicken eggs. They often have a distinct "wild" flavor and can sometime taste of pine/cedar if gathered from the wild. Domestic turkey eggs do not usually have a bad flavor but they are distinctly different than the egg of a chicken.
Yes, but they wont be fertile. Hen turkeys lay eggs in the spring with or without the tom.
No it does not it can be free to rom in the wild and u can freeze ure eggs but it's orrery dum u can just let them be cold but dont wash them
looking for a wild bearded chicken duck.
Chicken hens are but wild turkey females are called hens to.
If you are refering to 1984 hen and poults #6 $250.00
A young female turkey is called a 'Hen polut'
about 2 eggs.
It happens, yes, but it is not very common since most turkey eggs will be used for hatching and not eating it would be difficult to know when there is a double unless the hen was genetically prone to laying such eggs.