dustinNMpythons
New member
I say Queenbee, enchi, and lesser. That would be an awesome clutch. Hoping for a double and you hit a triple with a double sire can't get any better!
Has any of them slithered out of their egg shells?
PFFT. I have been bugging him all day about that.. He claims he is too busy to even look.. .. I think he just likes toying with our emotions like this..
*bites nails*
LOL
(love you Harald)
I doubt it - I haven't looked.
I didn't get to bed til late, and I had to finish putting together today's shipments when I got up.
Dinner, shower, drop them off, then to work.
I'm not expecting them out til the end of the week...
No deflecting.. that is NOT the hatchling we want to look at. LOLOLOL
Depends on what you are using for an incubator...I use coolers, but there is access - I take the drain plug out of the side to run the cord and probe. Heck, something could fly in when the incubator is opened to add a clutch or to check on eggs.I'm wondering how you would get maggots in your incubator if a fly didn't get in there
Willow, I'm going to help.
Imagine making that slit - carefully, oh so carefully - just a nice safe little window...maybe not even big enough to tell for certain what's inside, but you don't want to risk making it bigger. You looked, now you are going to torture yourself by waiting for the baby to emerge. Then, a day or two later when you open the incubator to gaze in at the precious, you see a movement that first draws you in for a closer look....then makes you gasp in revulsion.
MAGGOTS!! The fluid in the egg teeming with them.
Fighting the urge to slam the incubator closed and wash your eyes out with bleach, you steel yourself for battle. Wad up some paper towel, and do your best to scoop out them out of the egg; seeing more and more of the fluid spilling out each time. You have to make the cut bigger, because they've spread so far that you just can't get them otherwise. After what seems like an hour (but is actually only a few minutes), you call the job done. You did it!! You saved the egg, but the image of those maggots haunts you for the rest of the day, and fills your dreams that night. Finally, in the first light of morning, you find yourself standing at the incubator; taking that deep breath before you look again. You pop the lid on the egg box, and the substrate is just crawling with them...as is THE EGG. Imagine your stomach churning, as you see that little lesser enchi twitching against the movement of the maggots - trapped, and unable to crawl away because he isn't ready to hatch - and wonder WHY you had to know.
OK, so I looked at them. They're still in the eggs.
A lesser enchi is now dead in the egg - figures it was the one I was set on keeping. From the color, it seemed to have been a little behind in development (though, it was fully formed). I initially thought it was dead in the egg, because it was upside down and didn't move at all...but, after a day or two, it finally started moving around; and did so every time I opened the incubator, so I was hopeful. Ultimately, I'm not particularly surprised...but I would rather it had never showed increased signs of life/activity. The other one seems fine, as does the (whatever it is).
There are a couple of small slits in the other enchi clutch, but no noses yet. Next peek - FRIDAY