...a chicken and garden supplement? Absolutely!
Now, up until a couple of years ago I had no idea that egg shells were good for anything except waiting for me to crack them open. So, now that I know better, I'm happy to spread the news...Whether you
keep chickens and have an abundance of egg shells, or buy a carton or two each
week from the Farmer's Market or a grocery store, you can get more out of them than just a yummy
meal!
Egg shells, being pure calcium, can easily be used in the garden and are very good for tomatoes (and several other veggies) if you add a couple of tablespoons to the soil when transplanting your tomatoes into the garden at the beginning of the season. You can also feed them back to your own chickens as a supplement when they are molting or simply to help their new eggs have stronger shells or add the shells to your compost pile where they will decompose faster.
Saving and
using eggshells is easy. Simply keep a
bowl or paper bag handy to throw your
shells into once empty (we keep ours under our kitchen sink...rinsing them out first helps to limit the potential for
smells). As you collect the shells you
can either wait patiently for your shells to dry out on their own or you can put them on a
cookie sheet and into the oven at 250 degrees for 5-10 minutes.
Once the
shells are completely dry you can place them into a paper bag and crush them
using the palm of your hand (the paper bag helps protect your hand, egg shells
are sharp). You can also use a mortar
and pestle or the bottom of a cup to crush the shells in a bowl.
Now, we don't do this often at all. We save all our shells in a bag under the sink and once the bag is full, we go through the process of drying and crushing them. Some people even grind up their eggshells into a powder, but that seems like a little too much effort to me. Sometimes the least amount of effort can still reap wonderful rewards ;-)
I have been saving my shells! I read you can throw them in the food processor too which I the route I think I will try! I wonder if it would be ok to put some of them into my tomato seedlings?
ReplyDeleteYes! Tomatoes love the calcium. I will throw a little into the bottom of each hole I plant my tomatoes in this year :-)
DeleteThey will also help deter slugs if you spread them around the garden, the slugs won't crawl over them!
ReplyDeleteSo true! I don't think about slugs because we don't have them here...at least not that I know of! ;-)
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ReplyDeleteWe freeze ours and then either bake them like you mentioned or just crush them to feed to the hens. We even have a few friends doing the same for us!
ReplyDeleteNice! Why do you freeze them first? To kill bacteria?
DeleteI process my egg shell in a blender with a little water, then let them dry in a bowl on the counter for a week or so.
ReplyDeleteAdded to the worm bed as grit, broad cast in the garden and add to the compost bin!
When the Chicks get a little older, I will give them shells so they can take advantage of the calcium.
Tom
Sounds great, Tom! Kind of amazing how something as simple as egg shells can have so many uses, ha? I love it!
DeleteThanks for the info! I'm going to try crushing ours. So far I've just been putting them in the compost as is.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! Throwing them in the compost as is works, too...it just takes that much longer for them to decompose :-)
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