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Eggs and Slow Worms
We keep on finding eggs in our garden (Somerset) - they are small white hens egg sized - we have found about a dozen in the last 12 months - buried in the soil / in the compost heap - any suggestions as to what they might be ?
They are not fertilized or are not live - when broken open they smell awful and don't contain any viable or recognisable lifeform
We also have a breeding pair of slow worms - the cats keep on bringing them in to the house (unarmed if a little shocked) - these eggs are way too big for slowworm eggs, I assume - the slow worms are less than an inch thick....
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The female lays 8-40 eggs, depending on her size, in July-August. A clutch usually contains about 10 eggs held together by mucous, secreted by the glands of the oviduct, which then dries to hold the eggs together. Female grass snakes choose a warm site to lay their eggs, such as a compost heap or under rotting logs,
If small (like a bantam egg) the might be pheasant eggs. We had a nest in our daffodils last year. Really good cover until the leaves started to die back then she was in the open. Still almost invisible though.She usually sat tight if anyone had to go past. Once she was off the nest and we saw a hugh clutch (15 or so, I think) Then nothing but a pile of feathers - aah
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