Considering maternal incubation...
I've been doing some serious investigation and consideration for the upcoming breeding season. Now let me say, I'm a first time breeder, so I have no experience whatsoever.
Here's my situation. I live in a small, old house. I have a mini fridge in my garage ready to be converted, but it dawned on me that space may be of significant concern. I'm also worried about the electricity; I know I'd only be running flex watt, etc., but in the areas I have enough room for a mini fridge, finding an outlet that's not attached to a light switch would be a real problem (told you my house was old!).
So that leads me to 2 possibilities:
1. Purchasing a small incubator. The size would be great, but I wouldn't get more than 2 clutches at a time in there. It would work for my immediate problem, but not for my future plans. I'm leaning away from this.
2. Maternal incubation. This would be a great option for me in terms of space, and since I have no experience with breeding, letting mama do what comes naturally would be fantastic. I'm definitely interested in this.
I know there are a few breeders on BP.net who are successful with maternal incubation. What I would like to know from you is your general process with maternal incubation - kind of a maternal incubation guide. What are your temps and humidity? What substrate do you use? Do you feed and clean while incubating? Do you have a separate rack for incubating mothers?
Any info would be so very helpful.
Re: Considering maternal incubation...
What are your temps and humidity? I kept them around the same as usual which was around 88-92 degrees went for a 78-85 in humidity. People try to be the incubator but then what is mom there for, you know. What substrate do you use? What I did was made a hide for her with vermiculite as substrate. Do you feed and clean while incubating? No I didn't clean, I only cleaned the water bowl. Do you have a separate rack for incubating mothers? No, same tub same rack. QT is a pro at this and will chime in, I know it :).
Re: Considering maternal incubation...
For possibility #1, you should always have a back up in case your mom wants to act up. Lol seriously though! Building one is fun and to me it's all about the experience in making one. I can't build crap from scratch and really this was to me the most easiest thing to make. After you build your first one all youll need is new flex watt for how ever big your next incubator might be. You gotta start somewhere.
Re: Considering maternal incubation...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
KingPythons
For possibility #1, you should always have a back up in case your mom wants to act up.
Very good point. And while it's true, I'm not looking to get into large scale breeding, I'll probably have more than 2 clutches per year. Having a small back up would be prudent, for sure!
And I'll definitely look up Quiet Tempest's posts. The more I can learn, the better!