That’s Not Where Eggs Come From! Quest – Disney Dreamlight Valley

That's Not Where Eggs Come From! Quest - Disney Dreamlight Valley

I froze at 14:58 on the in-game clock, watching a tiny sprout refuse to cooperate while my event timer ticked. The odd name of the duty made me grin—then panic—because nothing in Dreamlight Valley hands out clear instructions. Solving it felt like finding a hidden key inside a packed toolbox.

I’ve chased every seasonal duty in Disney Dreamlight Valley, and I’ll walk you through this one so you don’t waste event time. Read this the way I play: short bursts, repeatable steps, and a couple of small routines that stack into results. You’ll save hours and nab the best rewards without the guessing.

I noticed the quest name and thought it was a joke before I read the fine print. That’s Not Where Eggs Come From! duty in Disney Dreamlight Valley

The title is deliberately cryptic: you don’t gather eggs from chickens here. You need to harvest 100 Spring V-EGG-etables total. The duty has four checkpoints—10, 30, 60, and 100—and each checkpoint hands a reward. If you aim straight for 100, you’ll tick off the earlier tiers as you go and save time.

My rule: treat the 100-goal as the only number that matters. That simplifies planning, keeps momentum, and stops you from obsessing over intermediate counts.

My seed tray buzzed while I made coffee. How to get Spring V-EGG-etables in Disney Dreamlight Valley

Short version: Spring V-EGG-etables must be made from a V-EGG-etable Seed, planted, watered twice with two 15-minute waits, then harvested. Below is the exact recipe and a few timing tips I use when I’m grinding event tasks between quests and character hangouts.

How do I get Spring V-EGG-etables?

  • Collect one Egg-cellent Fruit and one Wild Spring Egg.
  • Have at least 20 Dreamlight available.
  • Go to any crafting station and open the Refined Material category.
  • Craft the V-EGG-etable Seed.
  • Plant the seed anywhere in the valley you can reach.
  • Water the seed, wait 15 minutes, water again, wait another 15 minutes.
  • Harvest to receive one Spring V-EGG-etable.

Practical tip: set a phone timer or use Steam/Epic overlay timers so you don’t leave seeds idle. If you’re on Xbox Game Pass or console, a small alarm or Discord timer works fine too. I chain plantings in groups of five so the waits overlap like a well-oiled production line.

How long does it take to grow a V-EGG-etable?

From planting to harvest you need two 15-minute waits—about 30 minutes total per seed. That’s short enough to run errands, do a character quest, or trim a Dreamlight farming loop. Play in rounds rather than trying to babysit every seed.

On my second run I noticed the rewards looked worth the repetition. That’s Not Where Eggs Come From! rewards in Disney Dreamlight Valley

There are four rewards across the duty’s checkpoints. Three are event-only decorative prizes; one is a cookable item you can make outside the event. The table below lists each reward and the number of Spring V-EGG-etables required.

Crafting a V-EGG-etable Seed in Disney Dreamlight Valley.
Screenshot by Moyens I/O
Reward Image Requirement
Spring Chocolate Spring chocolate in DDV. 10 Spring V-EGG-etables
Blue Spring Rabbit Blue Spring Rabbit in DDV. 30 Spring V-EGG-etables
Pink Spring Rabbit Pink Spring Rabbit in DDV. 60 Spring V-EGG-etables
Yellow Spring Rabbit Yellow Spring Rabbit in DDV. 100 Spring V-EGG-etables

The Spring Chocolate (10 seeds) is cookable outside the event, but the rabbit decorations are exclusive to the duty. If aesthetic goals matter to you, plan for 60–100 seeds and distribute plantings across play sessions.

What are the best places to farm Egg-cellent Fruit and Wild Spring Eggs?

I scan the valley every morning and drop into known spawn zones. Egg-cellent Fruit drops from spring plants across the Meadows and Plaza. Wild Spring Eggs appear from event-specific spawn points and some villager interactions. Check r/DreamlightValley and YouTube creators for recent spawn maps—those communities update faster than official patch notes.

Two final tricks I use: stagger plantings in groups of five, and use short errands—character chats, fishing, or a quick crafting loop—during the 15-minute waits so nothing feels wasted. Treat your play schedule like a small bakery: set timers, rotate batches, and harvest while another batch cools.

The event runs April 1–21; if you miss it this year you can still work on seeds afterwards but the special rewards are tied to the event window and it will likely return around the same time in 2027. Want to argue whether the grind is fun or tedious—are these rabbits worth the time to you?