An egg in my border?
Author
Discussion

cslgirl

Original Poster:

2,215 posts

243 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
So I am digging up a flower border that is no longer wanted and digging near the roots of a small tree a white egg rolls out, can't be an egg I think, so I put some pressure on it and it cracks frown I know ducks can lay egss in soil, but this is a small egg. What could it be? I am hoping I may find some more when I carry on digging. It is a pure white shell and smaller than hens egg.

TuxRacer

13,816 posts

214 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
It's snakes.

I'd leave them alone?

OzzyR1

6,267 posts

255 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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Probably a grass snake, adders tend to have speckled eggs iirc.

There should be more.

satans worm

2,456 posts

240 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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Pheasant?

ShadownINja

79,278 posts

305 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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?

goldblum

10,272 posts

190 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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Slow Worm.

ShadownINja

79,278 posts

305 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
goldblum said:
Slow Worm.
Shut it, fast... er... cat.

Edited by ShadownINja on Thursday 24th June 12:20

Galsia

2,255 posts

213 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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They're dog eggs.

goldblum

10,272 posts

190 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
Galsia said:
They're dog eggs.
Can't be.

The Egg-laying Dog nests IN trees

not in the roots.Duh!

cslgirl

Original Poster:

2,215 posts

243 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
I haven't found any more and I have nearly finished getting rid of the whole border. Shame I crushed it as could have tried to hatch it and see what came out....

cslgirl

Original Poster:

2,215 posts

243 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
Apparently:

slow worms "are ovo-viviparous, which means that the eggs hatch either as they are laid or some minutes later." So being as it is slow, I would have seen it shifty off.

"Grass snakes are Britain’s only egg-laying snake. Females lay eggs in June or July, normally in rotting vegetation (including garden compost heaps) which acts as an incubator."

The grass snake eggs are speckly, this one wasn't. And there was only one.

Hmmm mystery egg.

Flintstone

8,644 posts

270 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
Might have fallen from a nest, been pushed out by a cuckoo or been dropped by another bird (jay, rook etc) after stealing it some way away. I often find shells in parts of the garden when the nests are elsewhere.

JustinP1

13,357 posts

253 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
It has been hidden by a predator.

Occam's Razor.

Blib

47,151 posts

220 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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JustinP1 said:
Occam's Razor.
I once got bitten by one of those. Nasty little thing it was.

Boosted LS1

21,200 posts

283 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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How small is it? A pigeons egg is smaller then a chicken egg but still largish. A wrens egg is the size of a little fingernail. We need more information please. Also what is the tree?

goldblum

10,272 posts

190 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
quotequote all
Nope.

Fallen out of tree.

The simplest solution?

Shaolin

2,955 posts

212 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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It'll be a dragons egg, they start off small and then Puff!

goldblum

10,272 posts

190 months

Thursday 24th June 2010
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very good!

cslgirl

Original Poster:

2,215 posts

243 months

Friday 25th June 2010
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The tree was a baby tree so it was too sparse for any nest to be built. No other trees nearby so could only have been dropped if it was a passing bird. Picture of broken egg below.


Phooey

13,483 posts

192 months

Friday 25th June 2010
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Scotch egg? did it have any plastic around it with the letters ASDA nuts