candling/hatching question

Ok so I candled again this morning and it turns out there were more bad eggs than good..:( but I am happy she has 8 good eggs.:) this is her first time so nt too bad I guess. There are a few eggs I am posting a pic of cause I didn't know what was goin on with them! Some input would be great! Lol

This is the one I was saying I couldn't see thru.
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This one I'm thinking is a not alive.
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This one I was curious about. It has a blood vein running around the egg that you can see at the top, but it has something red just floating around in it.
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Closer up pic of the red "blob" floating around in the egg.
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Can you see any sign of red blood vessels around the edges of the darkness in the first egg when candling? It does look similar to how they look when about ready to hatch, or an egg that has died very late in development. Are you sure this isn't a much older egg that has been incubated for longer than you were aware? Very odd for an egg that's only been incubated 10-11 days to look like that.

And I agree with nchls school, second egg pictured looks as if it has died.

Does the little red blob in the third egg swim around in there when you're candling (does it move on it's own when you are holding the egg still)? It looks like a little embryo in there for sure. Whether or not it is still alive is the question.
 
In the first, dark egg, there are no vessels or movement. The blob in the last egg doesn't move either. I go out there to check on them a couple times a day and I also peek out my back door several times since I can see them in my back yard from there. I'm pretty positive on how long she's been sitting..she was very active and I never saw her sitting before the 19th....if it was any sooner than that it possibly could have been the 18th but not before. If she was asleep or lounging, she was outside of the house and the eggs/nest is isnide the house. Now she is always on them unless I go inside the pen where the house is to feed or check the eggs. She has been laying for quite a while..could it just be too old?? When I counted the eggs this morning there were 19 total..11 of which weren't any good.
 
Should I Crack the dark egg and see what's inside? When should I expect to see movement in the eggs when I candle them?
 
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In the first, dark egg, there are no vessels or movement. The blob in the last egg doesn't move either. I go out there to check on them a couple times a day and I also peek out my back door several times since I can see them in my back yard from there. I'm pretty positive on how long she's been sitting..she was very active and I never saw her sitting before the 19th....if it was any sooner than that it possibly could have been the 18th but not before. If she was asleep or lounging, she was outside of the house and the eggs/nest is isnide the house. Now she is always on them unless I go inside the pen where the house is to feed or check the eggs. She has been laying for quite a while..could it just be too old?? When I counted the eggs this morning there were 19 total..11 of which weren't any good.
Can you see any veins in the last egg (they do not show in the picture)? If not the embryo has died. An old egg would smell badly, or, if it hadn't been incubated it would be clear when candled not solid dark. Breaking the egg open has to be your decision. I would never tell someone else to check an egg by breaking it open-what if there were a live embryo inside?
 
In the last egg there is 1 streak that runs the length of the egg, but only that 1 streak. There are no more. Ok. I will just leave the dark one out there and see what happens. I don't want to kill one by cracking it open, I was just curious about it. I've never done this before and so I'm learning as I go and I'm trying to do everything right.
 
In the last egg there is 1 streak that runs the length of the egg, but only that 1 streak. There are no more. Ok. I will just leave the dark one out there and see what happens. I don't want to kill one by cracking it open, I was just curious about it. I've never done this before and so I'm learning as I go and I'm trying to do everything right.
In the past I have cracked eggs open to find a living embryo that quickly died. Never crack an egg open unless you are sure it is bad. Just last week I had a questionable egg. I put it back under the hen and two days later it hatched.

I still think that last egg has died.
 
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Ok I'll just leave it and see what happens. When should I expect to be able to see movement when I candle the eggs?
 
Ok, if she has that many eggs in her nest and you know for sure 11 aren't good, you should remove those 11 eggs now. That is too many for her to sit on and incubate properly. I would also discard that dark egg since it can't be any good, either.

You also shouldn't be candling multiple times a day, that can disturb the eggs and the hen too much and cause problems. Once a week is sufficient for candling, but if you really can't go that long (I know it's fun and exciting, especially your first time incubating) at least go to candling once every few days. ;)

Oh, just saw your new question. Good to leave that last egg for now to be sure. Give them all a few days before you candle them again and then see what you see. You should be able to see the tiny little embryos swimming around in there by then.
 
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Thanks for the reply! I removed all of the bad eggs yesterday morning. I've only candled twice. Once a few days ago and once on day 10 to give them a few more so I could be sure before I took any eggs out. I planned on candling again sometime next week, just to keep an eye on them..I do go check on the ducks a couple times a day tho..sorry for the confusion! Lol I am super excited but I'm trying to be patient! The 28 days just needs to hurry up! Haha!!
 

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