GloryBe
In the Brooder
- Jun 8, 2015
- 16
- 0
- 24
Thank you for input, Birdrain92, I understand what you mean light and dence ect.
I will be taking notes as they hopefully progress.
You really don't find much information on line about hatching peafowl eggs. Our peafowl don't seem to have intrest on setting and I have no broody hens.
I am the same way about turning my eggs I don't think about it I just do it. I even had a nice cabinet made that it sits on when in use and I can put 2 inside
made specially for my Brinsea 20's and it as an extra area for things like sponges, cheese cloth (I put under the egg holder basket helps chatch egg shells as they hatch).
Also a great tip I found on a local Homestead site is if you have an incubator that the eggs may roll around in or like you said one side gets heavy, if you have an empty toilet paper roll or paper towel roll you can fold it then cut slices and set each egg in one of the slices you can even let them hatch setting on the roll slice
Thanks again for all your info
I will be taking notes as they hopefully progress.
You really don't find much information on line about hatching peafowl eggs. Our peafowl don't seem to have intrest on setting and I have no broody hens.
I am the same way about turning my eggs I don't think about it I just do it. I even had a nice cabinet made that it sits on when in use and I can put 2 inside
made specially for my Brinsea 20's and it as an extra area for things like sponges, cheese cloth (I put under the egg holder basket helps chatch egg shells as they hatch).
Also a great tip I found on a local Homestead site is if you have an incubator that the eggs may roll around in or like you said one side gets heavy, if you have an empty toilet paper roll or paper towel roll you can fold it then cut slices and set each egg in one of the slices you can even let them hatch setting on the roll slice
Thanks again for all your info