With
the herbivore eggs safely in your inventory, you can now either take them to a supply box to get extra research points, create certain crafting recipes that require them, or hand them over to the NPC that wanted them for a side quest.
To get
herbivore eggs in Monster Hunter World, you'll need to look for areas on your map with herbivorous and other docile animals lurking around.
Though tasty when combined with other ingredients,
herbivore eggs have a number of other uses in the game, including granting extra research points (if you know where to take them).
The quest «Gettin» Yolked in the Waste» tasks you with deliver a couple of
herbivore eggs so that the Meowscular Chef can upgrade the canteen.
Then you have to look for places that they congregate and search them for nests — these nests are where you'll find
the herbivore eggs.
Deliveries are one of the many different types of quests in Monster Hunter World, and one delivery quest given to you by the Meowscular Chef requires you to deliver
herbivore eggs to the Supply Crate in Wildspire Waste.
However, if you don't know where to find
the herbivore eggs, it can be a bit tedious.
To get your hands on
herbivore eggs, you will need to go to Area 4 of the Wildspire Waste, which is found to the right of Campsite 1 on Level 2, this is the southern-most point of the map.
For this quest, you will need to find and collect two
herbivore eggs and safely transport them back to the campsite and deliver them to the supply crate.
Before you pick up
the herbivore egg, put on the Ghillie Mantle and no monsters will be able to see you.
This should give you enough time to take
the herbivore egg to the campsite and run back to collect another one.
After the lanky beast purloins a fresh
herbivore egg and is about to smack it open, it catches sight of me creeping around the periphery of the lair and startles.
Not exact matches
The following materials make good compost: coffee grounds, corn stalks and leaves,
egg shells, garden plants killed by frost, grass clippings, kitchen scraps (fruits and vegetables), leaves, manure from
herbivores, pine needles, sawdust, shredded newspaper, straw, and weeds (unseeded).
So find a local farmer you trust and eat your meat,
eggs, and dairy with the confidence that humans are omnivores not
herbivores and that animal foods are clearly necessary to achieve your best health!
Again,
eggs raise cholesterol in
herbivores.