Tag: chickens

  • Egg customers crying fowl over empty shelves, high prices can now rent their own chickens

    Egg customers crying fowl over empty shelves, high prices can now rent their own chickens

    As customers face empty shelves and rapidly rising egg prices at the supermarket due to the avian flu and a lower national supply, breakfast lovers have another option – their own backyard. 

    Founded 12 years ago, Rent the Chicken provides customers with two egg-laying hens, a portable chicken coop, up to 200 pounds of feed, food and water dish and a book on taking care of chickens. 

    “Within two days of the arrival, your chickens will lay eggs ready to use!” the company promises, adding that the homegrown eggs have one-third the cholesterol, one-fourth of the saturated fat and two times more omega three fatty acids that store-bought eggs.

    The company adds, “Your Rent The Chickens should lay about a dozen to two dozen eggs per week depending on your Rental Package.  You will know exactly what your chickens eat!”

    NEW YORK RESTAURANT OWNERS SLAMMED BY SURGING EGG PRICES

    As customers face empty shelves and rapidly rising egg prices at the supermarket due to the avian flu and a lower national supply, breakfast lovers have another option – their own backyard.  (Tim Graham/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Customers can schedule a date on the website or the phone and the company will bring out the chickens, which are already laying eggs, as well as the supplies. 

    The chickens are also available for adoption if the customer realizes they want to keep them at the end of the rental period, the company added. 

    APP USERS CLICK HERE FOR POST

    Rent the Chicken co-founder Jenn Tompkins told ABC News that their phone is “ringing off the hook” as egg prices go up. 

    “Our online inquiries are filling up very quickly as well,” Tompkins said. “We will run out of hens available for rent. If anyone is interested, please make sure to put their reservation in sooner than later.”

    She said that the chickens cost around $500 to rent for about six months. 

    EGG SHORTAGES FORCE SOME GROCERY STORES TO IMPOSE LIMITS

    empty egg shelf

    More and more stores are seeing empty shelving because of dwindling egg supplies.  (Getty Images)

    While that averages out to about $20 a week for eggs, Tompkins said the chickens provide food assurance amid scarcity. 

    “We are not coming against the high price of eggs,” she explained to USA Today. “We are solving a problem of food insecurity; of not having eggs on the shelf. People can have eggs in their backyard.” 

    Eggs Unlimited Vice President Brian Moscogiuri told “Fox & Friends” on Thursday that the country is going through “the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve had in the last 10 years since 2015, potentially the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve ever had in the history of this country.” 

    In the last year, egg prices have risen 53% since January 2024, and they’re already up 15% since January of this year. 

    In the last three years, 153 million cases of bird flu have been found in poultry. 

    “We’ve lost 120 million birds since the beginning of 2022. In the last few months alone, since the middle of October, we’ve lost 45 million egg-laying hens,” he added. “We’ve lost a significant amount of production, more than 13%. So we’re just dealing with supply shortages. And it’s just a disaster right now because this virus is in three of the top egg-laying states in the country. It doesn’t seem like it’s stopping anytime soon.”

    eggs in a carton

    In the last year, egg prices have risen 53% since January 2024, and they’re already up 15% since January of this year.  (Celal Gunes /Anadolu via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Joe Defrancesco, a Connecticut farmer who started renting his chickens out five years ago, told WVIT-TV, “It’s really a learning experience. Yes you get an egg per chicken per day and it’s a great thing knowing you have eggs right in your backyard and you’re guaranteed.”

    Tompkins told Axios that the birds also have an added benefit for renters. 

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    “The chickens provide a level of therapy that people didn’t know that they needed,” she said.

  • White House says Biden admin’s killing 100M chickens contributed to high egg prices

    White House says Biden admin’s killing 100M chickens contributed to high egg prices

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt addressed the high cost of eggs while speaking to reporters on Tuesday, saying the Biden administration contributed to the supply shortage by directing the killing of over 100 million chickens.

    Leavitt held her first White House press briefing on Tuesday afternoon, when one of the reporters asked about the price of eggs skyrocketing since President Donald Trump took office.

    She told reporters there is a lot of reporting that is putting the onus on the current administration for the rising cost of eggs.

    “I would like to point out to each and every one of you, that in 2024, when Joe Biden was in the Oval Office or upstairs in the residence sleeping, I’m not so sure, egg prices increased 65% in this country,” Leavitt said, noting that the costs of bacon, groceries and gasoline have increased because of the “inflationary” policies of the Biden administration.

    HERE’S WHY GROCERS ARE REALLY RAISING PRICES

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt holds her first news conference at the White House on Jan. 28, 2025. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “As far as the egg shortage, what’s also contributing to that is that the Biden administration and the Department of Agriculture directed the mass killing of more than 100 million chickens, which has led to a lack of chicken supply in this country, therefore, a lack of egg supply, which is leading to the shortage,” she said. “So, I will leave you with this point: This is an example of why it’s so incredibly important that the Senate moves swiftly to confirm all of President Trump’s nominees, including his nominee for the United States Department of Agriculture, Brooke Rollins, who is already speaking with Kevin Hassett, who’s leading the economic team here at the White House, on how we can address the egg shortage in this country.”

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the average price of a dozen Grade A large eggs was $4.15 during the month of December, which shows an increase from $2.51 in December 2023.

    One of the largest reasons for the increase is the recent bird flu outbreak.

    SHELLING OUT: EGG PRICES RISE NEARLY 37 PERCENT

    cage-free-eggs

    Cases of cage-free eggs for sale at a Costco store in Florida. (Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via / Getty Images)

    The Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) was either directly or indirectly responsible for killing more than 20 million egg-laying hens in the last quarter of 2024, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported.

    Some estimations indicate the average price of a dozen large eggs could be nearly $5 by the end of 2025, which would be the highest average price for a dozen eggs ever recorded.

    GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

    Still, the price of eggs in California has already surpassed that, reaching nearly $9 per dozen in some areas.

    Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch contributed to this report.