That's a beauty. That reminds me I have a cat teapot somewhere. Where is it....

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That's a beauty. That reminds me I have a cat teapot somewhere. Where is it....
Mary is extremely easy to move aroundI agree with this. I could not move Sydney. She would have none of it.
So beautifully wrapped in their little white jackets!Wonderful.![]()
She was so happy!
I have a feeling Peggy will make a challenge first chance she gets. My job is to make sure that doesn't happen until any little ones are agile enough to get away from her.Hopefully she does not need to be.
Share a photo?That's a beauty. That reminds me I have a cat teapot somewhere. Where is it....![]()
You can take them out in the night without any problems.She was so happy!
I'm really looking forward to a day at home tomorrow so I can take the fake eggs away. I'm worried the fake ones might crack the real ones.
Ooh, how awfulOh no! There's a piece of Welsummer egg shell on the ground
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I have no further info at this time, but I'll be taking a good look later on when its dark and the other hens are asleep. I suppose I'll have to cut the other eggs away from her sticky feathers and give her a wash and blow dry while the other eggs slowly go cold.
I am not lucky when it comes to hatching.
Remember this is all about giving Mary the broody experience; it is not about growing the flock.Ooh, how awful
And the only one who could have done it is Mary?
If you need to wash her:
Do you have an old fashioned soft hot water bottle? Fill it with bath temp water and wrap it in a soft cloth. Or put a warm fleece on top of the eggs.
Better not wash the eggs. And certainly not with detergent.
I would get myself a small incubator asap (+thermo/hygrometer) and turn it on directly after arrival. Give the peeping eggs back to Mary at day 18-19.