Great results on your Buckeyes, too bad about the Chanteclers.
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Sounds good!Day 21 for my mixed Duck & Turkey hatch. 11/11 that were fertile on Day 7 are developing great. Lots of movent in the eggs during candling tonight.
How many does yours hold?Boo for clear eggs. Though... I won't deny that I was counting on some clears in my current batch. The incubator was a bit crowded. 13 is a nice fit.
How many does yours hold?
Cool.Variable by size. It's a great incubator, but it's designed for snake eggs, rather than birds, and it's an upright cabinet rather than a top-load. It actually has two shelves that I could use, but I like the temperature better on one height than the other, so that's where I like to put the eggs. Technically, I could use both - except that space between them is tight, which would make turning the eggs on the lower shelf difficult. Noteably... Snake eggs don't get turned. They need to stay in the position they were in when laid, because rolling them will usually kill the embryo. So when people collect their snake eggs to incubate, they frequently put a mark on the 'top' to be sure they keep that side up. The only problem with it is that I have to watch humidity closely, because high humidity is pretty important for snake eggs. They're usually incubated in a container, on a bed of damp vermiculite.
Cool.
Was it very expensive?
she is doing really good much better then she did the last few times she went broody i am very proud of her i put three eggs under her four days ago and my white leghorns egg was one of them her eggs are not fertile much ive had one fertile in the bater once but thats it and so i guess the egg i put under her was not fertile so she ate ithow is she doing today wolf? What day are her eggs on?
What kind of snakes do you breed?Variable by size. It's a great incubator, but it's designed for snake eggs, rather than birds, and it's an upright cabinet rather than a top-load. It actually has two shelves that I could use, but I like the temperature better on one height than the other, so that's where I like to put the eggs. Technically, I could use both - except that space between them is tight, which would make turning the eggs on the lower shelf difficult. Noteably... Snake eggs don't get turned. They need to stay in the position they were in when laid, because rolling them will usually kill the embryo. So when people collect their snake eggs to incubate, they frequently put a mark on the 'top' to be sure they keep that side up. The only problem with it is that I have to watch humidity closely, because high humidity is pretty important for snake eggs. They're usually incubated in a container, on a bed of damp vermiculite.