Yes or No?

gendwk

In the Brooder
10 Years
Joined
Jan 15, 2010
Messages
35
Reaction score
1
Points
32
Location
vista ca.
is it good to use a disinfectant egg wash, before incubatiing valley eggs.?
 
you should never wash an egg before putting it in the bator, if it is dirty just wipe it down with a clean towel
 
agreed, when a hen in the wild sits on her eggs she doesnt wash them first.
 
Thats what I thought, but a report on gamebird breeding by University of California, said " to wash and disinfect each eggbefore incubating", hhhhhmmmmm?
 
Either way works. This is a long term point of contention. Eggs are coated with a protective layer. When you wash them, you remove that protection. If you use a very strong disinfectant, you risk the life of the embryo. If you incubate (a somewhat less natural condition than the wild) then you can also incubate bacteria. Reasonable cleanliness of the eggs is enough due to the protective layer on the egg. Depends on how much you want to mess with them I reckon. It seems to me it is a personal preference. I tend to wipe off excesses and leave them alone otherwise. I spend a lot of attention on disinfecting my incubator though. I figure that rascal creates a nice environment for bacteria and I use a bleach solution between hatches to keep it safer.

David
 
That all makes sence to me thanks you all especially about a super sanitary incubator,,,thanks to all
 
Quote:
if it is the same one I read it gave some days not to wash them as well like inbetween the 2nd and 5th??
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom