Dang! Those are super dark eggs.Did a quick head count and pulled some empty shells. Couldn’t get a good picture but had 9 so far. Added water and locked them back up.
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Dang! Those are super dark eggs.Did a quick head count and pulled some empty shells. Couldn’t get a good picture but had 9 so far. Added water and locked them back up.
I agree, very nice color.Dang! Those are super dark eggs.
That's a great hatch... congrats.11out and one left, he was a little dried up so I moistened him up and put him back. 3 died right without pipping. 12 out of 15 seems ok to me.
Personally second break is the darkest I've seen, and sometimes the first lays ever are the darkest.Question of the day, how many eggs do you let them lay before you decide what color they lay? Do they start the darkest they’ll ever be and just get lighter every egg? Or do they sometimes get darker after a few eggs?
, some will stay dark nearly the whole time lol.Lines vary. The average of first 21 is usually the best idea, maybe ignoring those early paler ones. But other lines people have a darker second season, so the first 21 of her second season also works.Question of the day, how many eggs do you let them lay before you decide what color they lay? Do they start the darkest they’ll ever be and just get lighter every egg? Or do they sometimes get darker after a few eggs?
Ok, thank you. So they do start lighter and get darker when they first start laying?Lines vary. The average of first 21 is usually the best idea, maybe ignoring those early paler ones. But other lines people have a darker second season, so the first 21 of her second season also works.
In their first week, they may being getting used to everything, so pale, splotchy or other anomalies may occur. The start of the first or second year is usually the darkest they’ll ever be.