Re: How to care for eggs after you cut them
Hi,
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Xan Powers
from my understanding cutting any veins at that point is not going to kill the snake by any means. now cutting the animal yes, but a little blood in the amnionic fluid is nothing to worry about. cutting a vein would only create a bloody mess.
correct me if I'm wrong though.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk. Xan Powers!
Cutting a small minor vein isn't generally a problem.
Cutting the larger ones however certainly could be. Cutting more than one definately would be a bad idea.
That blood is the animals blood - bigger veins take longer to close up and lose blood faster.
They are small enough for blood loss to be a major problem if you just hack away at the egg without paying enough attention.
I always candle the eggs first and draw the larger veins on the shell with a dull pencil or mark out an area with very few major veins so I can cut with a fair amount of reassurance. I still make a pigs ear of it but at least it is just ugly instead of dangerous. ;)
dr del
Re: How to care for eggs after you cut them
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sookieball
Because you and heather have helped me on so many of my posts
I shall wait to pipp.
I promise its not impatience that's making me want to cut.
But this is true.
Livelyness does indicate health.
And true. Pipping in birds is essential as well because it means and makes the birds neck capable of something something... I don't remember.
But I'm sure the same rule applies slihtly in BP's as well.
Thanx! I'll post pics soon of the first little dudes to pipp... Hopefully soon!
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I'm looking forward to seeing what you get regardless of how it gets here. ;)