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I have been told to put cod liver oil in their feed if you are getting porous shells.
It looks like ten to fifteen days development. The egg is too porous. That may be part of the problem. I candle eggs before setting them to check for cracks and porous shells. I may be wrong in this assumption (I have not read this anywhere), so don't quote me, but I've assumed porous eggs may let bacteria in, which could damage the embryo. If anybody knows the science behind this, please chime in. If I'm wrong, and porous eggs are normal and should be set, please post. I wish I had more time to do research.
It is a good idea to check for this but is often due to lower calcium levels. The more porous eggs will allow bacteria to more readily penetrate, however all eggs allow this. You can set and hatch these with great success and improve the hatch rates with your other eggs by spraying an Oxine / water mixture at the time you collect the eggs, then again before you set them. The oxine is non-toxic but is known to kill bacteria, virus, fungus, and mold spores. It is the only approved topical treatment for eating or hatching eggs. I saw our hatch rate increase drastically when we began using it this way several years ago.
I have been told to put cod liver oil in their feed if you are getting porous shells.
When I am old, I shall grow purple.... no, no... When I am old I shall wear purple. But since you are young, you will grow an entire color wheel of eye candy. I need to make garden plans.
When I am old, I shall grow purple.... no, no... When I am old I shall wear purple. But since you are young, you will grow an entire color wheel of eye candy. I need to make garden plans.