Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Blood Red Bearded Dragons For Sale Are My Bearded Dragon Eggs Bad?

Are my bearded dragon eggs bad? - blood red bearded dragons for sale

My orange giant German / blood red bearded dragon is about one years old and covered for the first time. The course went well and she eats like a pig again, but I'm not quite sure whether the eggs are white and pink, but most are not blocked, only about a dozen today, I added more water to see whether they have a backup could perform, because they have an embryo, and all of them. Students are not large, but it somehow makes me worry. Who knows what's going on, it was natural that solvable? let me know, thank you

4 comments:

madsnake... said...

I think I never published the first response reptiles bred in captivity. It runs perfectly eggs. To highlight the point, they are always right. Certainly do not want a heat lamp on them. Never heard of it. You do not want fried eggs! Eggs buried a sign of low humidity. Store in an airtight container. Open once a week provides enough fresh oxygen for the eggs to survive. Vermiculite or perlite are the best substrates and can be purchased at Lowe's at the Garden Center or Home Depot. And do not worry too much about the appearance. The eggs hatch I never thought I could. Oh, and you can check whether the eggs by using a flashlight to search for in the blood vessels are fertile. Sterile egg has no blood vessels. It is easier in a completely dark room. And powdery mildew only infertile eggs.

madsnake... said...

I think I never published the first response reptiles bred in captivity. It runs perfectly eggs. To highlight the point, they are always right. Certainly do not want a heat lamp on them. Never heard of it. You do not want fried eggs! Eggs buried a sign of low humidity. Store in an airtight container. Open once a week provides enough fresh oxygen for the eggs to survive. Vermiculite or perlite are the best substrates and can be purchased at Lowe's at the Garden Center or Home Depot. And do not worry too much about the appearance. The eggs hatch I never thought I could. Oh, and you can check whether the eggs by using a flashlight to search for in the blood vessels are fertile. Sterile egg has no blood vessels. It is easier in a completely dark room. And powdery mildew only infertile eggs.

madsnake... said...

I think I never published the first response reptiles bred in captivity. It runs perfectly eggs. To highlight the point, they are always right. Certainly do not want a heat lamp on them. Never heard of it. You do not want fried eggs! Eggs buried a sign of low humidity. Store in an airtight container. Open once a week provides enough fresh oxygen for the eggs to survive. Vermiculite or perlite are the best substrates and can be purchased at Lowe's at the Garden Center or Home Depot. And do not worry too much about the appearance. The eggs hatch I never thought I could. Oh, and you can check whether the eggs by using a flashlight to search for in the blood vessels are fertile. Sterile egg has no blood vessels. It is easier in a completely dark room. And powdery mildew only infertile eggs.

Reggie said...

First, bearded dragon eggs should be kept on their feet in a plastic container with a heat lamp.


Secondly, never toutch eggs. Furthermore, only one apartment.

Third, once they hatch to keep children away from their parents. Spray every day. old toutch not before Q1.

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