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I have learned something new today! Thank you for sharing your experience![]()
I tend to ramble too. Hatching at 10,000' is a problem. Mostly due to weight loss and oxygen. I posted the following in another thread you may want to hold on to if you end up incubating.I feel like every business in the Colorado Rockies claims to be the world's highest something or other. My house is at almost exactly 10,000 feet and I'm on the park, not on the mountainside. The thing that complicates baking/cooking/etc. has to do with the lower boiling point of water (probably other factors too). Cooking rice has never been so hard! I have never incubated, though this thread is inspiring. I will definitely chat with other CO peeps before undertaking it. It is sooooo dry here too, humidity is also an issue. Interesting theory about the yolk size; that makes total sense. Ok, now I'm rambling, I'm stopping now.
Do you recognized The Man??The ones Kiki bought from the grocery store were alive, it could’ve been someone in my family as most of are Vietnamese and sadly boil it alive like they do with seafood
Lol no but wouldn’t be surprised if my aunts sister knows him as she lives in HoustonDo you recognized The Man??
This is correct.If the breeder flock is at higher elevation, humidity may need to be lowered and ventilation increased."
This is backwards. I find hatching at a mile high requires lower humidity (30%) during incubation period and ventilation definitely needs to be increased especially during lockdown to increase available oxygen.If you would use 50% humidity at sea level, you would need 65% humidity at 10,000'.
I live in an area where there not only is a Spanish only speaking class in each grade level but also a Vietnamese only speaking class in my public elementary school.Lol no but wouldn’t be surprised if my aunts sister knows him as she lives in Houston