Learn how to identify common empty bird eggs with this handy guide

By Ben Hoare

Published: Monday, 08 January 2024 at 12:08 PM


Eggs are nature’s miracles of packaging, often lustrous and exquisitely patterned. Once a childhood rite of passage, ‘bird nesting’ is illegal nowadays – but there’s no harm in collecting empty eggshells, says Ben Hoare

Common bird eggs to spot

Pheasant eggs

Image credit: Getty Images


Pale brown or olive; 4.5cm
Pheasant eggs resemble small, rounded chicken eggs. Large clutches are the norm – between eight and 15 eggs is usual. There’s no nest as such, just a simple hollow in the ground

Lapwing eggs

Lapwing eggs
Image credit: Getty Images

Ochre/sand-coloured with darker markings; 4.5cm

Beautiful squiggles and blotches provide perfect camouflage for lapwing eggs in open farmland. Each nest scrape usually contains four. Traditionally the eggs were an Easter delicacy.

Woodpigeon eggs

Woodpigeon egg
Image credit: Muséum de Toulouse, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Pure white and glossy; 4cm

‘Woodies’ can produce up to three clutches of two eggs and, remarkably, manage to breed in any month of the year. Look for broken eggshells in woods and gardens.

Blackbird eggs

blackbird eggs
Image credit: getty images


Greenish with even red freckles; 3cm

These are among the most frequently found eggs, often in gardens. Blackbirds are able to raise two or three broods, with three to five eggs in each clutch. The nest cup is lined with grass.

Song thrush eggs