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I am still looking by the way .. will need dome hopefully European help
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Re: plastic grids for egg tubs
shouldnt we also discuss if it is needed at all? Putting the eggs directly on the substrate could be better or worse or could be the same, just easier to do. How do you place eggs at an angle onto such a plastic grid? Im a fan of having the eggs in exactly the same angle that the female initially places them in the clutch. With such a plastic grid, all are placed horizontally. Looks tidy, but is it good to move an egg from a standing position to a horizontal position?
please clarify. Maybe the best advice is to just forget about it.
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Re: plastic grids for egg tubs
 Originally Posted by Kurtilein
shouldnt we also discuss if it is needed at all? Putting the eggs directly on the substrate could be better or worse or could be the same, just easier to do. How do you place eggs at an angle onto such a plastic grid? Im a fan of having the eggs in exactly the same angle that the female initially places them in the clutch. With such a plastic grid, all are placed horizontally. Looks tidy, but is it good to move an egg from a standing position to a horizontal position?
please clarify. Maybe the best advice is to just forget about it.
The reason most of us use it is because we can keep our incubation substrate VERY wet. You don't have to worry about getting the right mix of substrate:water and just add as much water as possible. With the grate the eggs can still be placed at the same angle they were layed at, you basically just grab the clutch and place it on top of the egg crate. The only time you may have to separate any eggs is if the clutch is very tall then you may have to remove an egg or 2 off the top so it isn't in contact with the lid of the tub.
As far as maintaining the orientation of the eggs, they can be moved alittle bit when they are first layed. Also I have read a couple reports that it maintaining the orientation of BP eggs isn't as big of a deal as it's made out to be. A member Muddoc(Bailey&Bailey Reptiles) on here did alittle experiement with flipping eggs over to see if it caused any problems.
Here is the link to that experiement.
http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...%2Borientation
It wasn't a huge number of test samples, so not a "true" scientific experiement, but still worth knowing.
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The Following User Says Thank You to C&H Exotic Morphs For This Useful Post:
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Do you have any friends state side that could cut a piece to the size you need and ship it to you? it's pretty light and cut up i can't imagine it would be to expensive to ship.
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Re: plastic grids for egg tubs
thanks, your response makes a lot of sense.
And a big thanks for the link, really interesting. So someone dared to try it and turning the eggs is maybe not as dangerous as most expect.
and i also have something to say about metals: i would stay away from metals. Aluminium is less noble than iron, under certain conditions it rusts and corrodes much faster than iron. Im not a chemist, but what will a bunch of aluminium compounds in direct contact with the eggs do? If nothing serious, at least some local discoloration. Zinc has the same problem. Metal with permanent high moisture.... there is a reason why people have gold teeth, to really be safe when metals touch your eggs you must go for noble metals, or at least a silver coating. Then again, plastics can also spew harmful toxins especially as they decompose. Like PET additives are now under suspicion of causing male fertility issues in humans. Or like certain tubs that can mess up sex ratios when breeding mice or rats in them. The way to handle this is to buy stuff designed for pets, and hoping the manufacturers take that purpose into account when selecting the plastic materials used. Or try to use more natural materials.
p.s.: send an email to http://www.ms-reptilien.de , you know, Stefan Broghammers company, they breed in southern Germany, maybe they can hook you up.
Last edited by Pythonfriend; 02-09-2013 at 02:11 PM.
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Sorry, I ddnt notice you are on the other side of the pond LOL, wasn't in your profile so I didn't think about it
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Re: plastic grids for egg tubs
Hi,
I use this stuff.
Hopefully you can find that somewhere more local. 
dr del
Derek
7 adult Royals (2.5), 1.0 COS Pastel, 1.0 Enchi, 1.1 Lesser platty Royal python, 1.1 Black pastel Royal python, 0.1 Blue eyed leucistic ( Super lesser), 0.1 Piebald Royal python, 1.0 Sinaloan milk snake 1.0 crested gecko and 1 bad case of ETS. no wife, no surprise.
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Re: plastic grids for egg tubs
 Originally Posted by Kurtilein
shouldnt we also discuss if it is needed at all? Putting the eggs directly on the substrate could be better or worse or could be the same, just easier to do. How do you place eggs at an angle onto such a plastic grid? Im a fan of having the eggs in exactly the same angle that the female initially places them in the clutch. With such a plastic grid, all are placed horizontally. Looks tidy, but is it good to move an egg from a standing position to a horizontal position?
please clarify. Maybe the best advice is to just forget about it.
No it is not needed at all...
It not that hard to mix some vermiculite and water together...I have done it for years with no problems!
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yes, after reading all this i agree, do maintenance and refill water every 2 weeks and it will be fine. Its just that the professional breeders have so much to do that they do the vermiculate/water mixup just once, and it lasts through the whole egg development until hatching. And for that the plastic grids are required.
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