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It does, but that made it easier to apply.Wouldn't coconut oil liquify at incubation temperatures?
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It does, but that made it easier to apply.Wouldn't coconut oil liquify at incubation temperatures?
But could it seal anything when liquid? I'm just wondering .It does, but that made it easier to apply.
The chick was about to hatch. The oil was to keep the chick from drying out.I would stay away from any kind of oil as a means of sealing an egg. I know that Canada Goose control involves oiling goose eggs so the embryos die and return them to the nest so they don't lay another clutch but the eggs will never hatch.
Precisely.The chick was about to hatch. The oil was to keep the chick from drying out.
It looks like the chick bled out from a broken blood vessel sadly.