An egg in my border?
Discussion
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
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.
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.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.
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.
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