Grocery store egg prices amid bird flu drive many to backyard chicken coops

Last year, Finley started a chicken-raising consulting business, The Royal Chicken Coop, to help newcomers navigate the process. Egg-selling has been a word-of-mouth business for Finley; her clients include local bakeries, salon clients, neighbors and others on an ever-growing waitlist. 

Christina Yi, 21, a student at Harvard University, has built her very own business as an intermediary of sorts. When seniors’ parents visit every two weeks or so, they bring fresh eggs from their backyard coop about 45 minutes away, in Haverhill. She sells some of them to her closest friends. 

Christina Yi holds a chicken while smiling outside
Christina Yi sells fresh eggs from her dorm room at Harvard University.Courtesy Christina Yi

“Whatever I get is sold in the first two emails I receive,” Yi said. “The demand is that crazy.”

The fresh eggs have become such a hot commodity, they make good gifts, too. 

“One of my friends just had his birthday, and instead of me getting him a present, I just gave him two dozen eggs for him to cook for his birthday party,” she said. “He loved it.”

The benefit of fresh eggs comes with important work, however.

Because of bird flu concerns, Joshua Cooey of Tallahassee, Florida, has made sure his coops are tightly secured to prevent contact from outside birds. The demand for eggs from his 30 chickens has increased sharply — he estimates he has a weeklong waitlist — but he has not strayed from his rate: $5 for a dozen.

“My feed costs haven’t gone up,” said Cooey, 27, who works in finance. “I’m selling eggs to pay for the chickens. I’m not trying to make a living out of this. So it allows me to break even, but also give people a higher-quality product than what they would buy in the store. And there’s something to say about how that makes you feel personally.”

For Christin New, whose multigenerational family moved from Redwood City, California, to a 2-acre home in the nearby Santa Cruz Mountains in 2022, her seven chickens provide the feeling of family pets while also producing fresh eggs. Like Cooey, she isn’t selling eggs to turn a profit.

Christin New holds a chicken while another one stands on her shoulder, she wears yellow rimmed glasses
Christin New and her family raise chickens in rural Santa Cruz Mountains in northern California.Courtesy Christin New

“I care about pets and animals, and so if I can raise chickens and they can lead a good life, and can provide eggs that promote a good diet, then it’s great,” said New, 39, a clinical research scientist.

Finley’s chickens down in Atlanta have also become part of her family, she said. She named them after influential Black women like Oprah Winfrey, Kamala Harris, Maya Angelou and Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett. Her college-aged daughters named one Beyoncé.

“I love them,” she said. “They are spoiled. I feed them fruits, berries, greens — stuff from my own scratch that’s chopped up and dried.”

But, while Finley has created a small business, most of New’s eggs are for her home and neighbors. “If we have excess, we will sell to neighbors, but probably at a loss. We’re just glad to provide fresh eggs,” New said. “They say, ‘If I’m going to pay $5, $6, $7 a dozen, I’d rather buy them from the chickens that I walk by at your house and can see that they live a nice life outside.’” 

In a similar spirit, Amir Johnson, who raises 10 chickens in Atlanta said it feels “good to be able to give eggs to my friends and those in need.”

Amir Johnson tends to a chicken in a coop
Amir Johnson’s chicken eggs help feed Atlantans in need.Courtesy Amir Johnson

The 32-year-old began raising his chickens last year for the purposes of donating to the homeless through his nonprofit organization, Need To Feed. His group provides meals for the unhoused once a month in and around Atlanta.

He grows organic vegetables and aspires to feed others “from my own food sources,” he said. “So, I got chickens to see how that would go.”

Johnson hopes to eventually have enough land so the people he serves “won’t have to go to the grocery store for any food,” he said. “I want to do it all there.”

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