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I love this kind of stuff

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Some people freak out and think eggs need to "breathe". So they think paper is best and that bubble wrap will keep the egg from breathing and kill it.
If you are buying shipped eggs you can always ask the seller before committing if they will wrap the egg completely in bubble wrap or any other way you want. I'm guilty of sending eggs in wood shavings, that was probably not a great idea for moisture. But in my defense I had completely wrapped them in bubble wrap, twice over and this idea had not occurred to me yet. We only know what we are taught about shipped eggs and how to or not to do it.
It's hard to say this works better than that and so forth, since you may get a disgruntled postal worker on one day and not another so two shipments on a day apart from the same person may arrive in completely different shapes.
It just makes sense to me. I was amazed at the difference in the air cells in the wrapped vs non wrapped eggs. Just have to cure that mold issue...When I first started buying shipped eggs that was exactly my first thought. I was furious that someone had actually wrapped them in bubble wrap. But after experience its quite the opposite. My newspaper, tissue paper, and even paper towel wrapped egg shipments are hardest to hatch regardless of breed. Even the Orpingtons shipped in the same state are a challenge when they weren't wrapped in plastic- usually the typical bubble wrap. I've had exotic eggs arrive from Cali wrapped in bubble wrap hatch very well vs paper wrapped. So, I definitely think moisture has a lot to do with hatchability.
The bloody pullet egg from expt #2 was porous. The air cell in it is as good as the other wrapped eggs from that experimentJoining in here. This may also help with overly porous eggs....![]()