hysop
RIP Ryder (2022) & Hammy (2019)
Oh wait Black Jersey Giants have some white/yellow in them at the beginning right? So would that mean they’re full and if they are 100% black that would mean they’re mix? Or not necessarily?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Interesting! I think the handling of your particular post office pathway also matters a lot, and obviously none of us, shippers or buyers, can control that.
- I've had foam ones not work out either. Several smashed eggs (*ahem, MH*)
- The individual bubble wrap also doesn't work great if they just throw them in willynilly (*ahem, MPC*)
- I don't have any experience with people shipping in cartons, but that seems misguided.
- The best outcomes I've had so far have been with bubble-wrapped, placed fat-end up, with enough shredded paper filling to limit movement, with one box packed inside of a larger box, and the box marked with an UP direction and some kind of indication that it's got live contents.
With that, air cells might still be a little looser than preferred, but I haven't had any scrambled eggs and or cracks. An occasional early quitter, but can't be sure what caused that.
Exactly this -- having decent equipment and having sourced your eggs well makes all the difference. My first batch was with a borrowed styrofoam bator with wicked hotspots, with eggs I bought from My Pet Chicken. NEVER AGAIN, on either front. After that, I splurged on an Incuview, and buy from either local sources or reputable breeders. I did try Meyer Hatchery eggs once, and while it was a little better than MPC, they don't send extras unless you buy a lot, and several of their eggs were either cracked, clears/early quitters, or already-growing-but-dead (!!). My best shipped rates so far have come from a breeder in California (I'm in NJ) - his stock is good, and his shipping practices are top notch.
Mine is on the kitchen table. We eat at the bar so we don’t use the table that much... and I am like your three year old can’t stop looking every time I pass it.. lolSo where do you keep your incubator?
Mine is in my living room. Probably not a good idea since my 3 year olds love looking at em and sometimes touch the side table enough to rattle the eggs a little, although as each day goes by they look at them less.
Mine are in the kitchen. I worry about temperature fluctuations when I cook, but it's the only place I have that will work right now.So where do you keep your incubator?
Mine is in my living room. Probably not a good idea since my 3 year olds love looking at em and sometimes touch the side table enough to rattle the eggs a little, although as each day goes by they look at them less.
Mine is on the kitchen table. We eat at the bar so we don’t use the table that much... and I am like your three year old can’t stop looking every time I pass it.. lol
I have my 2 incubators on plastic shelves in the tub of my spare bathroom, lol. I keep the door closed to maintain more consistent room temp and humidity. There isn't a window, so it makes candling much easier.So where do you keep your incubator?
Mine is in my living room. Probably not a good idea since my 3 year olds love looking at em and sometimes touch the side table enough to rattle the eggs a little, although as each day goes by they look at them less.
Mine are in the kitchen. I worry about temperature fluctuations when I cook, but it's the only place I have that will work right now.