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My personal thoughts on hatchlings with tangled cords
This is interesting, and makes a good point! Now I am paranoid because I DID in fact just cut my eggs! lol Today was Day 60 and none had pipped yet, so after reading what others do, I decided to go ahead and pip. This is my very first clutch, so I am definitely a newbie speck of dust!!
Kimbly
Pastel 'Cami' Mojave 'Tank'
Kingpin 'Cleo' KillerBee 'Buzz'
Pied 'Patches' Lesser 'Lieutenant Dan'
Mojave 'Lyla' Het Pied 'Norm'
2 Normals 'Audrey' and 'Girl' Fire 'Smokey'
Black Pastel '#3' Normal 'Slim Shady'
Butter
Sassy and Reilly, our furry girls
Gabrielle, Brynn, Samuel - our human kids
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I haven't hatched a clutch yet, but I wholeheartedly agree with this theory
Females: 0.1 fire; 0.1 sugar; 0.1 GHI; 0.1 pinstripe het desert ghost; 0.1 mojave spider; 0.2 mojave; 0.1 black pewter blast; 0.1 leopard pied; 0.1 champagne; 0.1 pied; 0.1 super pastel lesser; 0.1 pewter; 0.1 spider het pied, 0.1 bumblebee; 0.1 lesser; 0.1 spider; 0.1 normal; 0.3 het pied
Males: 1.0 het desert ghost; 1.0 pastel pied; 1.0 leopard; 1.0 black pastel; 1.0 enchi; 1.0 mojave; 1.0 cinnamon; 1.0 pied; 1.0 vanilla
Other species: 1.0.3 pacman frogs (sunkissed, super apricot, super blue, super lime green); 0.2 crested gecko; 1.0 hypo hog island boa; 0.1 normal boa; 1.0 rottweiler; 1.0 chihuahua
instagram = lesliep91
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I had my first umbilical cord issue this year. I cut my eggs, and yes I'm sure it's partly, if not totally to blame for the twisting/knotting issues. I still plan to cut my eggs, and just keep an eye on the cords.
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I would like to hear more on the subject of dead, fully developed babies who couldn't get out of the egg.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Kodieh For This Useful Post:
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Re: My personal thoughts on hatchlings with tangled cords
 Originally Posted by creepin
selectively breeding genetic mutations for aesthetic purposes isn't exactly natural.
Really breeding snakes in captivity isn't natural at all, if you're going to go that route. When I said keeping the process as natural as possible, it was implied that it wasn't COMPLETELY natural.
[Python regius]
1.0 Black Butter Pinstripe (Amazeballs), 1.0 Pastel Butter Leopard (Thunderbeeper)
0.1 Spider (Charlotte), 0.1 Leopard (Spot), 0.1 Pastel (Buttercup), Fire Sugar (Abaddon), Crystal (Opalescence)
[Python brongersmai]
1.1 T+ Albino (Kushiel & Carmilla)
[Boa imperator]
1.0 Hypo 100% Het Leopard/66% Het Albino (Darcy)
0.1 66% Het Leopard/Albino (Gabby)
[Colubrids]
0.1 Cave-dwelling Rat Snakes (Betty Spaghetti)
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Re: My personal thoughts on hatchlings with tangled cords
 Originally Posted by meowmeowkazoo
nor will I be candling them.
I haven't produced a clutch of my own yet, so really I'm just spitballing here, but it seems to be that candling is a totally non-invasive way to ensure that you aren't letting your female incubate infertile eggs for 60 days and probably refusing food for that time. Also, and again, not based on personal experience, it seems like infertile eggs or ones that start out fertile and fail to develop are the more likely ones to grow mold or start to go sour and could possibly affect your healthy eggs.
Just what I've gathered from reading around this forum and watching the boyfriend with his corn snake eggs, which he does not cut btw. If all the eggs in a clutch have pipped except a couple, he'll try to wait them out and if they haven't pipped within a day or so he'll cut to check on the baby but it seems like those end up containing dead-in-egg babies most of the time anyway.
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My personal thoughts on hatchlings with tangled cords
This thread is very interesting as I have my very first clutch in the incubator as we speak. Several years ago I raised corn snakes and never cut the corn eggs, and have no plans to cut these eggs either. It seems plausible that this theory could have some merit.
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Another speck in the wind here, just incubated 2 clutches of eggs and it was my first time with doing it. After reading all the stuff on here about cutting I determined that I would not cut until some of the eggs had pipped on thier own, only cutting eggs 24hrs after the first pip. I didn't have any problems with either clutch but I did decide to let the second pip on its own.Second clutch had all pipped on thier own within 36hrs and the babies were all fine. I think I will be doing this in the future to help avoid problems and to make sure the babies come out when they are ready.
And I was very guilty of disturbing the tub too much after they had pipped. Gonna try to be a good boy next year.
Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?
Never argue with idiots. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with their experience.
Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.
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The science is sound.
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I'm also one who now subscribes to the 'better left alone and be patient' crowd. I don't know yet if there is enough evidence in my collection to say things go better, but I sure worry less about it now. When I was cutting, I was always making sure that the eggs stayed clean and didn't develop problems. Now, I just let them run their course. So far, so good.
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