20,000 chicken eggs were removed from stores and dumped at the city landfill, but after three months something unexpected happened
In the spring, a routine health inspection led to the removal of approximately 20,000 chicken eggs from city retailers. The eggs were deemed unacceptable due to being expired, cracked, or dirty.
All the discarded eggs were transported to the local landfill, a site enclosed by barbed wire. They were unloaded and dumped like regular trash, their cartons eventually breaking apart in the rain.
After three months, an unexpected event occurred. The landfill caretaker noticed the crows were avoiding their usual spot on the organic waste pile.
When he went to investigate, he was stunned. Thousands of tiny, yellow chicks were moving through the rubbish. The small, squeaking birds scrambled over rotten food and discarded containers.
The news of the “chicks from nowhere” spread quickly across the city. Crowds gathered to witness the phenomenon, and scientists were baffled, as the landfill provided no suitable conditions for eggs to hatch naturally.
Unable to find a logical explanation, locals began adopting the chicks. Some were motivated by compassion, while others acted out of superstition.
For the city’s residents, the chicks were more than just birds; they were an inexplicable miracle born from the trash.