In the spring, 20,000 chicken eggs were removed from stores due to their unsuitability All the eggs were sent to the city landfill, as usual, but after three months people noticed something very strange No one could have predicted that something like this could happen because of ordinary eggs… Continued in the first comment

In the spring, an incident occurred in the city that seemed ordinary. The health inspection removed nearly 20,000 chicken eggs from stores.
Most were deemed unsuitable: expired, cracked, dirty. All were sent to the city landfill, behind a fence with barbed wire.
Trucks unloaded the cartons of eggs like regular trash. After a few days, the boxes fell apart in the rain, birds pecked at some, and the rest simply got lost among the other garbage.
Residents almost immediately forgot about it.
But after three months, something happened that no one could have predicted.

It was early in the morning when the landfill caretaker noticed that the crows weren’t landing as usual on the pile of organic waste. He approached — and froze. Something was moving inside the mountain of trash.
Thousands of tiny yellow fluff balls scurried between rotten potatoes and empty yogurt containers. Small, squeaking, alive. Chicks. There were many of them.
They were everywhere — between tires, under plastic bottles, in the cracks of old furniture. How did they survive? How did they hatch without an incubator, without a hen, without care?
The news spread through the city at an incredible speed. People came to see the “miracle.” Scientists were baffled: there was no logic to it. The landfill had no conditions for hatching, especially after such a long time.

Locals started calling them “chicks from nowhere.”
The chicks began to be taken home — some out of pity, others out of superstition.
And although official services found no explanation, for the city residents it was clear: these were not just chicks. It was a miracle born among the trash.