BBC. "Under normal circumstances it wouldn't have been possible or fair on them."Ms Lillo says she got the idea after watching a video on social media, but never expected it to actually work."I was so excited for them to hatch but I still had in the back of my mind that these are supermarket eggs," she added."They have been collected, bashed around on a delivery truck, then rattled around on a trolley onto a shelf, picked up and put down by who knows how many people, so they still might not go all the way."Waitrose admit say that many eggs we buy each day are fertilised but are safe to eat and 'entirely indistinguishable' from unfertilised."Our farmers work hard to ensure ducks and drakes are separated correctly," a Waitrose spokesperson.
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