Hatching Eggs - African Geese

Sale Price: $85.00 Original Price: $100.00

African Geese are superb guard birds for homesteads, hobby farms, and full-scale operations. Their loud, alert voices and confident presence make them excellent sentries while also providing a useful source of large, flavorful eggs.

What you get

  • Bundles of 4 African goose eggs

  • Shipping within 2–4 weeks from order placement

  • Eggs collected by hand daily

About African goose eggs African goose eggs are large, thick‑shelled, and prized by bakers and homesteaders for their rich yolks and high yolk‑to‑white ratio. Many African geese, however, are poor sitters—laying in spurts and often preferring to graze rather than brood. Because of this, natural hatch rates can be low.

If you plan to incubate:

  • Expect to need a broody surrogate (a reliably broody hen or duck) or a dependable incubator with careful temperature and humidity control.

  • With patient management and the right setup, rearing goslings is possible, but it requires extra attention.

Our practices

  • Humanely raised birds

  • No chemical use on the property

  • Rotational grazing practiced

  • Permaculture principles promoted

Shipping and refunds

  • We take great care packing eggs for shipment.

  • Once the package is accepted by USPS, we are not responsible for transportation issues or the condition of the package.

  • Refunds are not available for eggs sold for the purpose of hatching, regardless of hatch rate.

Questions about incubation, broody surrogates, or using African goose eggs in baking? Ask us — we love to help fellow homesteaders succeed.

African Geese are superb guard birds for homesteads, hobby farms, and full-scale operations. Their loud, alert voices and confident presence make them excellent sentries while also providing a useful source of large, flavorful eggs.

What you get

  • Bundles of 4 African goose eggs

  • Shipping within 2–4 weeks from order placement

  • Eggs collected by hand daily

About African goose eggs African goose eggs are large, thick‑shelled, and prized by bakers and homesteaders for their rich yolks and high yolk‑to‑white ratio. Many African geese, however, are poor sitters—laying in spurts and often preferring to graze rather than brood. Because of this, natural hatch rates can be low.

If you plan to incubate:

  • Expect to need a broody surrogate (a reliably broody hen or duck) or a dependable incubator with careful temperature and humidity control.

  • With patient management and the right setup, rearing goslings is possible, but it requires extra attention.

Our practices

  • Humanely raised birds

  • No chemical use on the property

  • Rotational grazing practiced

  • Permaculture principles promoted

Shipping and refunds

  • We take great care packing eggs for shipment.

  • Once the package is accepted by USPS, we are not responsible for transportation issues or the condition of the package.

  • Refunds are not available for eggs sold for the purpose of hatching, regardless of hatch rate.

Questions about incubation, broody surrogates, or using African goose eggs in baking? Ask us — we love to help fellow homesteaders succeed.