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RE: moldy eggs

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Posted by: BrandonSander at Tue Jul 22 12:56:40 2008   [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by BrandonSander ]  
   

When eggs are laid (fresh) they do not have mold spores on them. However, your equipment and substrate might (actually, they most likely do).

Here's a little preventive trick I use. I'm sure others have used it as a curative treatment, but for me prevention is always cheaper in time, money and energy.

Whenever you mix up your incubation medium (be it vermiculite, perlite or whatever else you find to use) mix in a little methylene blue. You can find it in the aquarium section of your local pet store. It's fairly cheap and common so you should have no difficulty obtaining some.

Just follow the dilution directions on the bottle. It will most likely give you directions for a minimum of 10 gallons. Just get an empty 1 gallon milk jug and cut the dilution by 1/10.

Whenever your medium is dry simply re-wet it with your leftover solution.

You can mix this up now to help prevent further mold growth if you'd like. Don't apply it directly to the eggs - pour it in your medium (in the appropriate amounts - you don't want your eggs to get too wet).

Since you already have moldy eggs, follow the other poster's advice and get some athlete's foot powder. Simply put some powder in your hand and sprinkle small amounts over the moldy areas on the eggs. If you'd like, you can gently rub the powder onto the mold.

I usually soak all of my incubation supplies in a methylene blue dilution before setting everything up for the season. I've had no problems so far. Before I started this regimen I would use the foot powder method as a curative measure with pretty good results.

I know my posts get long, but hopefully for those of you who trudge through them I've managed to help someone. I hope your eggs do well (even if they ARE from an inferior species )


   

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