Which Chicken Breeds Lay Colored Eggs?
When we first decided to try raising chickens, the breeds we chose were based solely on what types of chicks the local feed store had that spring.
We just said "we'll take two of whatever you have" and ended up coming home with two Buff Orpingtons, two Silver Laced Wyandottes and two Rhode Island Reds.
Cute chicks, beautiful chickens, wonderful layers...and they all laid brown eggs. Which was fine with me.
Growing up the granddaughter of chicken farmers, I was always told, "Brown eggs are local eggs and local eggs are fresh". And fresh eggs were certainly my goal. So life was good.
Which Chicken Breeds lay Colored Eggs?
Until one day when the guy at the feed store showed me a blue chicken egg that another customer had brought in.
Wait... WHAT?
Chickens lay blue eggs? I knew some laid white, but blue? I had no idea that there were different colored chicken eggs besides brown and white.
But yes, it was true. Chicken eggs come in all shades of blue, green, pinkish, cream and dark, dark brown.
Although all eggs start out with white shells, the blue or brown dye (or both) applied to the shells of some breeds results in eggs that come in almost all the hues of the rainbow.
And even brown eggs come in a wide variety of shades when they come from different breeds of chickens.
So once I discovered the world of colored eggs, of course I got online and started researching chicken breeds and egg colors, and then began a quest over the next few years to assemble a flock that lays every color egg imaginable.
So that meant I had to look further than our local feed store. I have ordered chicks from the large hatcheries, including Meyer Hatchery with wonderful results, but for more rare breeds, you likely will have to search out a small breeder.
The Livestock Conservancy Breeder Directory is a good place to start if you are trying to locate a more rare breed.
**Remember of course when choosing breeds, you should make your final decisions based on temperament, hardiness and other breed characteristics, not purely based on egg color.**
Here is a guide that might help if you are looking to add some color to your nesting boxes:
Brown Egg Layers
Light Tan Egg Layers
White Egg Layers
Cream Egg Layers
Pink Egg Layers
Chocolate Brown Egg Layers
Speckled Egg Layers
Green Egg Layers
Blue Egg Layers
Surprise Egg Layers
If you want a bit of a surprise, then add a few Easter Eggers to your flock.
They are so named because they can lay a variety of shades of green (mint, pale, bright, olive), pinkish or cream eggs. In fact, you likely saw them listed in several of the above lists for that every reason.
A particular chicken will only lay one color egg her entire life, but each Easter Eggers could lay a different color egg for you. Truly a mystery until she lays her first egg.