She said/He said Who's right? Who's wrong? No one!

Still somewhat new to all this Incubating stuff, but I'm loving it so far.... wish I would've seen this post a month ago.... I have a Styrofoam incubator from TSC and first attempt was with 48 eggs... we lost 13 and the rest are starting to hhatch as I type

That's awesone!!!! Welcome to the thread! !!

If you hatch 35 of 48 in an LG on your first hatch you could probably teach me about hatching
:smack

He does have a point though! ;)
 
Those are gorgeous!!! Box them up quick, I'll give you the address!! :gig

Seriously, nice job!! :thumbsup

And those are considered Your Line now... you bred them, that is your breeding... your flock is based on (yadda, yadda's) line, but those were bred by you... F1 is used for a 1st generation in crossbreeding different breeds for a project, like Olive Eggers and such... :)

Thank you!! I'm happy with the little spots. Now to get breeding pens setup. C'mon spring. And now I know what F1 means...:gig
 
That sounds like heaven. How do they like Texas?? I have a friend that moved down there and he loves it...well, when he's there, he's been in the Phillipines more than Texas I think...lol
 
Quote: They like it so much that none of them want to come back to Michigan. They are all in very different climate areas of Texas. My parents are down in the subtropical coastal area near South Padre Island where they have palm trees, grapefruit and oranges, bananas and papayas and avocados in the back yard, one sister is on a small farm near Houston with climate more like Georgia and Alabama, and the other is in a cooler, drier area in the hills.

I'm still looking for the perfect climate where I can hatch and brood year round, ride my motorcycle and enjoy the classic car without being too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry, or too close to the coast (rust) but close enough to go fishing every few weekends.
 
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They like it so much that none of them want to come back to Michigan. They are all in very different climate areas of Texas. My parents are down in the subtropical coastal area near South Padre Island where they have palm trees, grapefruit and oranges, bananas and papayas and avocados in the back yard, one sister is on a small farm near Houston with climate more like Georgia and Alabama, and the other is in a cooler, drier area in the hills.

I'm still looking for the perfect climate where I can hatch and brood year round, ride my motorcycle and enjoy the classic car without being too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry, or too close to the coast (rust) but close enough to go fishing every few weekends.
LOL That's great. 2 out of three sound like something I would like.
 
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to everyone!!

I'm way, WAY behind on the thread...so I've got some catching up to do.
I think this might be a good thread for me...I think my ideas about incubating are a little too far out there for most.
Ok...my ideas are actually FAR out there.
gig.gif
 
They like it so much that none of them want to come back to Michigan.  They are all in very different climate areas of Texas.  My parents are down in the subtropical coastal area near South Padre Island where they have palm trees, grapefruit and oranges, bananas and papayas and avocados in the back yard, one sister is on a small farm near Houston with climate more like Georgia and Alabama, and the other is in a cooler, drier area in the hills.

I'm still looking for the perfect climate where I can hatch and brood year round, ride my motorcycle and enjoy the classic car without being too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry, or too close to the coast (rust) but close enough to go fishing every few weekends.
The hill country. Every where in texas gets how in the summer, but there it's tolerable and dry. Winters are cool but not terrible. Couple of hours from the coast.

It's expensive tho.
 

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