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How to tell if a turtle egg can give birth to a baby turtle?

Many turtle friends want to experience the pleasure of breeding and regard the success of breeding as the highest realm of raising turtles, so they call for finding adult male and female turtles, providing a good environment, mating every other year and hibernating to lay eggs in spring. It seems that everything is going well and it will hatch soon, but at this time it is dumbfounded. Where are the eggs? Where can I find eggs? If you can't find the egg, the turtle friend will definitely not stop. Must be digging three feet. If you find an egg, but it breaks, you can't experience the last process and fun of hatching. Therefore, it is very important to take eggs safely. Tell me about my experience.

Some people know that turtles have laid eggs, but there is no place to lay eggs in the yard. I dug casually, either I didn't find any eggs, or I dug up the whole nest of eggs, and my expectations for one year fell through and I regretted it.

In fact, the place where eggs are laid is often darker than the side. This is because the tortoise will pee in the spawning place first, make the sand soft, and then dig a hole. After laying eggs, compact the soil, and the freshly dug wet soil will cover it. Therefore, it is quite easy to find eggs on the dry ground, and this color difference can be maintained for 1 ~ 2 days. Of course, if the soil on the side is also wet, it will not look good or bad.

So if the color on the ground is similar, it is difficult to distinguish the specific location. Where should eggs be most easily found in the yard?

If you plant trees or plants in your yard, 80% of the eggs will be laid near the north root of the tree or plant, a little will be laid in the south root of the tree or plant, and a few will lay eggs randomly, but they will still choose to go down the wall. Anyway, near the roots of plants is your main battlefield. This is my experience.

If you dig by hand, you will find that the soil near the spawning area is compact in structure and shaped when you dig, while the soil near the place without eggs is loose, so it is not good if you don't feel the difference here when you dig with tools. It is recommended to dig by hand.

Let's talk about how to dig eggs safely:

Many novices dig eggs and regret being too reckless. In fact, as I said above, they lay their eggs in tightly structured soil, and novices often dig out the tightly structured soil from top to bottom, which makes it easy to break the eggs.

In fact, as long as we find loose soil near the tight soil and dig down, after digging to a certain depth, we will slowly push it from the side to the tight soil and adopt a side detour tactic. When you push, you will find that the soil is easily taken away by groups, that is, close to the target, and then continue to push slowly until you see the white thing-eggs, and then carefully expand the space next to it. When taking eggs, take them from the side, not from the top, which is not easy to take.

Finally, talk about the problem of laying eggs on the yellow side. The eggs under the yellow edge are shallow, and some even have shells outside, while the eggs of water turtles such as yellow throat grass are often deep, so you can determine the approximate depth of digging eggs on the edge according to the variety of turtles, and also provide a key position to avoid the loss of turtle eggs.

These are some of my experiences, please add them to my list.

Put the turtle version for a few days, and then change to the cultured version.