English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

what have you all used for egg hatching? I am using perilite at the moment any pro's or con's to each. respond if you have personal experience with either.

2007-02-23 18:40:18 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Reptiles

here are some websites that discuss
perilite http://www.boakingdom.com/breeding_colubrids.html
http://www.deancloseprep.gloucs.sch.uk/chelonia/paulsarticles/pvcret.htm
http://www.sapphiredragons.com/htm/CrestedGeckocaresheet.pdf
http://www.greenigsociety.org/breeding.htm
http://repticzone.com/forums/BeardedDragons-Breeding/messages/73525.html

2007-02-24 03:38:07 · update #1

i am hatching beardies hopefully

2007-02-24 16:21:43 · update #2

5 answers

I have been experimenting with both for a few years now. I like the perlite for use with my bearded dragon and crested gecko eggs. It seems to keep the humidity up without the eggs actually touching any moisture. However, last year I tried perlite with a clutch of my albino kingsnakes and my clutch of arizona mountain kings, and all of both clutches molded and perished, while all my clutches from my other snakes in the same incubator hatched with around a 95% hatch rate. I think the vermiculite is easier to judge the humidity (most of the time). This is only my personal experience, and only over the past few years. By the way, what will you be hatching? Good luck!

2007-02-24 04:18:12 · answer #1 · answered by malice6372 2 · 0 0

Vermiculite! Perilite is hard and porous and hard to tell if it is saturated or not. You can't squeeze out excess moisture with perilite, so it's hard to adjust for too much humidity. I don't know anyone who swears by perilite, but vermiculite has been used for ages.
Fireside3

2007-02-24 06:15:28 · answer #2 · answered by Fireside3/Phrynosoma-Texas 4 · 0 0

definetly vermiculite for a laybox.it holds the moisture well is a nice soft substrate and can be released of excess water easily.

2007-02-24 09:35:29 · answer #3 · answered by reptilekid1988 1 · 0 0

Ive used vermiculite with no problems.

2007-02-26 20:34:35 · answer #4 · answered by rock 3 · 0 0

i have only ever seen perlite used to grow olive tree cuttings but it helps with regulating the temperatures and aerating. can give humans an itchy ticlke in the throat and burns the eyes (if it happens to get in them, which is quite easy to happen). couldnt see it being for the skin or scales on reptiles, where did you get this idea from? is it common practice?

2007-02-24 04:58:49 · answer #5 · answered by otsy 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers