he did not appear to be wet at all though...he looked just fine in there just the membrane was all dry and papery. No extra fluid or swollen up or anything.
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That is good news!he did not appear to be wet at all though...he looked just fine in there just the membrane was all dry and papery. No extra fluid or swollen up or anything.
Questions often come up about the likelihood of pullets vis a vis cockerels in a hatch so I thought I'd share something.
Yesterday,my son was riding with me after he dropped his car off for repairs.
We were talking about selling some chickens. He asked if chickens are hatched with a 50/50 chance of being pullets and cockerels. I said yes. He did a little math in his head and told me there's a 1 in 5,000 chance that a dozen incubated eggs will either be all pullets or all cockerels.
He's in college for actuarial science. The exact number was closer to 4,990 something but he rounded up.
Yes, that is true and it does happen that a hen will lay more eggs that are female sometimes. Averages work over large numbers but there can be a lot of variation when looking at small samples.Doesn't the hen carry the gender.... The gene that decides the genders is carried by the hen so the hen that has pullets more often will usually have pullets more often?
Interesting anyway... Out of seven buff orps I got six pullets and one male. And only time will tell but I'm testing out feather sexing and it looks like my Bantam hen had three pullets... three for three.
My first chick hatched last night!!! He is so cute and vent sexed as a male. 5 more eggs need to hatch, i assisted the first guy because he was more developed but he was shrink wrapped bad. i think it was because he had a very porous egg shell. Humidity has stayed almost constant at 55-70%. Today is day 23(24 really but two power outages put them behind).