Morpholeon, I have started with verrucosus in 2006, and according to the fact that they are very bad sellers in Europe I several times happend to have about 15 animals older than 6 months at home. Therefore it sounds a bit funny to me when you, with 6-months experience with a pair, tell me that "I can believe in what I want" but the truth is different.
I do not remember the number of cluthes, something between 4 and 6.
You do not need to follow my temperatures (though your "written information" may have been suggested by someone with an one-clutch-experience). For example, it is also possible to incubate at constant 24 degrees, the incubation lasts 14 months (my method lasts 7.5) and the babies are very small and most of them are girls (I happend to have girls only with this method).
Maybe I should add some more general information. I think that there are about five people in the Czech Republic with a breeding success. All but me and another one have stopped keeping or at least breeding verrucosus after they could not sell the very first clutch (in fact I had my last this year, I am also going to quit with this species). Concerning two breeders I am in contact with, if I remember it well, none of their males survived the second winter.
Kiniongia, it is not difficult to raise the babies, they have similar requirement as panters. It is not over 95%
The recordman is a male of mine who started his forth winter now, anyway, I believe that it is not because of my conditions but because I am lucky to have an extremely hard animal.
Kinionga, it is not difficult to raise babies. I think that they are even easier then panters (in my case 95% vs. 90% of those hatched survived). They grow extremely quickly, increase of 10cm of the total length in their third month. This may be related with their winter requirements, they live very intensively in summer.