- Thread starter
- #31
They have fluffy butts. I'd let the seller know. The girls may need to have a spa day. After incubation, with the eggs sitting in the bator for 21 days, it would be impossible to tell if they were fertile or not. I expect that the blastoderm would have disintegrated by then. If they had started to develop, there would be at least a bit of blood if you opened them. They could have been fertile but still failed to develop. I don't understand: You took the Jub Orp eggs out of the bator, and put them in the fridge? Why?
They have fluffy butts. I'd let the seller know. The girls may need to have a spa day. After incubation, with the eggs sitting in the bator for 21 days, it would be impossible to tell if they were fertile or not. I expect that the blastoderm would have disintegrated by then. If they had started to develop, there would be at least a bit of blood if you opened them. They could have been fertile but still failed to develop. I don't understand: You took the Jub Orp eggs out of the bator, and put them in the fridge? Why?
They have fluffy butts. I'd let the seller know. The girls may need to have a spa day. After incubation, with the eggs sitting in the bator for 21 days, it would be impossible to tell if they were fertile or not. I expect that the blastoderm would have disintegrated by then. If they had started to develop, there would be at least a bit of blood if you opened them. They could have been fertile but still failed to develop. I don't understand: You took the Jub Orp eggs out of the bator, and put them in the fridge? Why?
I took them out because there was no sign of any development when I candled them. I put them in the frdge after that because I didn't know what to do with them while I consulted with you all to figure out whether or not to contact the seller. This is my first experience with all of this so I want to be sure to follow proper chicken owneer etiquette ... if they want to see them, I wanted to have them available for them.