As stated I'm looking for Large fowl Polish hatching eggs, A variety fine, as long as some are Golden. I'd like a dozen or more shipped to FL or locally if available
Quote:
It's more of a "Can I hatch out eggs that have been refrigerated, may not be the freshest, and have been handled roughly?"challenge ... regarding breed.. I called the farm that packaged my eggs and asked.. all their birds are production New Hampshire reds ... So I know what I'll get if...
Quote:
vents are no substitute for a fan... the fan is there to make sure the entire incubator is the same temp inside.. without it you'll get "hot spots".. the store bought "still air" incubators can get away without one because they use a heating element that is almost as big around as the...
I took the bottom rack off of mine, and use a small cardboard box in the bottom for a hatcher.. I plan to put it back and rearrange all 3 shelves so I can have 3 turners and still have a bottom hatcher.. but it's going to take a little finagling to make it work
thinking about building a hoop house style coop & using a billboard tarp as the cover.
Any of ya'll used billboards before? How many years did you get out of them?
anybody know where I can find one in central Florida so I can avoid shipping?
Thanks!
subject says it all, I'm looking for a dozen or more polish hatching eggs.. with at least 1/2 of them Golden Polish. Let me know what you got & how much you want. I'm in central Florida but shipping is fine
Quote:
It's too big to put in a house and here in NC we have no basements. We hit water here........ lol. If I were to make an incubator out of it would I have to find a way to put in a glass door?
You wouldn't have to.. but i would make it really tense on hatch day if you couldn't see what's...
1. wood is fine, my gqf is wood
2. anything that gets hot, hell my 1st homemade bater used the elements I robbed from a toaster
3. the biggest fan you can fit
4. Possible? yes! Easy? no!
you're about 1 degree too low... i think you're gonna run into problems if you don't raise it.
if you're having a hard time getting it to balance out, you should look into moving the thermostat closer to your heat source and possible a stronger fan depending on how big of a cabinet you built...
I'm wanting to do something similar to what you're describing for water ... the picture i have in my head is a small reservoir inside the bator that has a float valve from a toilet tank... and that would be connected to a 5 gallon bucket of water on top of the bator... this way the internal...
120? probably no good, typically anything over 102 for an extended period of time is then end of the line... if you don't currently have anything else you want to put in the bator, give it a few days and candle, however if you have something else you want to set, i'd throw it out
think about the positive .. the strep throat may give you a fever and get the egg closer to 99.5 for a few days .... ok that's a stretch for a positive.. but it's something
Quote:
It was about 24 hours, the eggs were very cold, but prior to then I'd been turning them and monitoring their heat, just figured it was something about either them being too old, my my construction needing a look over.
that's not a deal breaker.. people have had power outages longer...
Quote:
I thought they were all set up more or less the same way, so I can only speak to mine (a 1266 i think)...
the wafer is there in case the electronic thermostat fails, that's why you set it at 102, the bator will never exceed 102 (anything over 102 will kill the eggs) in a perfect work...
Quote:
she most likely would not recognize it as her own... if she hasn't gone broody, she will not be expecting chicks... i would not put them togeather
Quote:
yep .. still viable .. that's how we are able to ship them to each other.. and in fact you can even successfully hatch eggs that have been refrigerated for a couple of weeks!
even the chickens give it a while before they "go broody" and sit on the eggs to hatch them.. and with good...