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I agree wholeheartedly. I wish people on ebay would base their feed back for them on what quality of birds they're getting from their eggs rather than if they arrived in one piece.
I agree! But that is all we can do for feedbacks how she packaged the eggs, not the fertility part. However as I noticed in some Ebayer's feedbacks there were some updates on the products. Its too bad that Ebay wont allow later feedbacks when you question the fertility. I do remember those kind of lines, Relics, and it just rubs me the wrong way.....
PrettyFrog, you are not cursed about hatching out blue chickens. Orpingtons are the hardest to hatch out or "hold" on to the embryoes to last until hatching times is touchy. It does get expensive and sometimes I would have to end up buying a trio for the same amount for eggs needed to build up a flock.
Candled the Spitz eggs, disappointed in the roo, his fertility is not that great. One egg for every four to six eggs!
My friend that got her eggs only got one out of every eight eggs! Fertility is questionable there.
I agree wholeheartedly. I wish people on ebay would base their feed back for them on what quality of birds they're getting from their eggs rather than if they arrived in one piece.
I agree! But that is all we can do for feedbacks how she packaged the eggs, not the fertility part. However as I noticed in some Ebayer's feedbacks there were some updates on the products. Its too bad that Ebay wont allow later feedbacks when you question the fertility. I do remember those kind of lines, Relics, and it just rubs me the wrong way.....
PrettyFrog, you are not cursed about hatching out blue chickens. Orpingtons are the hardest to hatch out or "hold" on to the embryoes to last until hatching times is touchy. It does get expensive and sometimes I would have to end up buying a trio for the same amount for eggs needed to build up a flock.
Candled the Spitz eggs, disappointed in the roo, his fertility is not that great. One egg for every four to six eggs!
