I do!![]()
I do too...But...my incubator doesn't drop humidity hardly at all when I do. As long as there isn't an external pip I do.
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I do!![]()
I was wondering what humidity you guys incubate at. I have still yet to hatch a peachick this year, and I am getting quite frustrated. My pheasant eggs and ornamental duck eggs have been incubating at 55% humidity and I have been doing great with them, especially the ducks that I have nearly one hundred of. Fertility definitely is an issue with my peafowl, and the rain we have been getting is not helping I am sure. Out of the fertile eggs, most of them die midway or towards the end of incubation. I have tried them at 55% humidity and some at lower humidities after reading suggestions to try lower humidity. I did give the last eggs of the first clutches to a local person to incubate at roughly 40% humidity to see if he has luck. Also, the two that made it to hatch were malpositioned and did not survive. I am expecting second clutches soon, and I am still hoping that I can hatch some peachicks. I did contact a breeder and they are making out okay considering the large number of breeder birds they have, but some other breeders he knows only have chicks in the single digits.
I was wondering what humidity you guys incubate at. I have still yet to hatch a peachick this year, and I am getting quite frustrated. My pheasant eggs and ornamental duck eggs have been incubating at 55% humidity and I have been doing great with them, especially the ducks that I have nearly one hundred of. Fertility definitely is an issue with my peafowl, and the rain we have been getting is not helping I am sure. Out of the fertile eggs, most of them die midway or towards the end of incubation. I have tried them at 55% humidity and some at lower humidities after reading suggestions to try lower humidity. I did give the last eggs of the first clutches to a local person to incubate at roughly 40% humidity to see if he has luck. Also, the two that made it to hatch were malpositioned and did not survive. I am expecting second clutches soon, and I am still hoping that I can hatch some peachicks. I did contact a breeder and they are making out okay considering the large number of breeder birds they have, but some other breeders he knows only have chicks in the single digits.
This is so true, but why? Are they just not amorous when there isn't enough sun, or is there an actual scientific correlation?Rain kills fertility.
Help! I have been hand feeding and watering my broody chicken who is sitting on 6 peahen eggs that are due to hatch next weekend. Today I noticed a rotton smell under her that was not there yesterday...i carefully picked up each egg one at a time to see if i could easily identify the culprit but i couldn't tell either by sight or smell...yesterday she did take a break for awhile to dust bathe and stretch her legs...do you think she could have been off the nest for too long...and if so would the eggs rot that fast? She couldn't have been off the nest for more than 3 hours. Or was this egg domed some time ago and is just now smelling? I've never candled eggs before...how do i do this and will it tell me if the peachicks are still alive? We have come so far i would hate for it to end this way...please help!![]()
Do the eggs feel light yet dense on one side? If the eggs have peachicks in them you can feel the egg become light when they get close to hatching. Yet one side of the egg will feel weighted down. What kind of scent are they giving off? Is it a kind of scent that would make you cry and run away from the eggs that could kill a skunk, or is an egg smell? If it is a smell that could kill a skunk then the egg would have been dead for a long time.
I was wondering what humidity you guys incubate at. I have still yet to hatch a peachick this year, and I am getting quite frustrated. My pheasant eggs and ornamental duck eggs have been incubating at 55% humidity and I have been doing great with them, especially the ducks that I have nearly one hundred of. Fertility definitely is an issue with my peafowl, and the rain we have been getting is not helping I am sure. Out of the fertile eggs, most of them die midway or towards the end of incubation. I have tried them at 55% humidity and some at lower humidities after reading suggestions to try lower humidity. I did give the last eggs of the first clutches to a local person to incubate at roughly 40% humidity to see if he has luck. Also, the two that made it to hatch were malpositioned and did not survive. I am expecting second clutches soon, and I am still hoping that I can hatch some peachicks. I did contact a breeder and they are making out okay considering the large number of breeder birds they have, but some other breeders he knows only have chicks in the single digits.