No I candled them right before and made sure the air cells were all on top. They were dropped air cells though, so who knows. I will just leave them and see what happens. I don't want to shrink wrap them.
When I set the eggs I put the air cell facing up. they are in a horizontal position. Some of them are pipping on the bottom (still on the rounded side) of the egg. Do I roll them? It is the right end, but the underneath side of the egg? Never had that happen before. Thanks!!!
When I set the eggs I put the air cell facing up. they are in a horizontal position. Some of them are pipping on the bottom (still on the rounded side) of the egg. Do I roll them? It is the right end, but the underneath side of the egg? Never had that happen before. Thanks!!!
I turned the humidity up when I went into lockdown to 65. No pips but peeked and one has broken through the membrane. I will be sitting on my hands until they hatch. The hatch day is tomorrow, so maybe they will do some pipping over night. Go little goslings!
I put them into lockdown. You can see that shadow, so I think they are ready to bust out of there. I'm so excited. Cotton Patch Goslings are so cute!!!
I have cotton patch goose eggs in my incubator which take 30 days to hatch from what I can find out. Today is day 25. I have dropped air cells which worry me a bit. It looks like they are pressing against the air cell. When do I stop turning?
I have hatched eggs with dropped air cells before. I have some geese eggs that were shipped and the air cells didn't appear to be dropped at first. I am 2/3 way through the incubation and I can see that they are dropped a lot. Anyone have any experience with this and know what the chances are...
They're two to three years old. There are twenty of them. They eat laying pellets, leftovers, produce and we get about two eggs a day out of twenty-five all together. They have oyster shells. Is there a way to tell if they can still lay eggs?(I'm asking for a friend) Thanks!!!