It was really too early.I have not candled yet. I have learned with welsummer and marans eggs it's best to wait until at least day 10. They are just too dark to tell anything early on. Plus I ordered a new egg candler off ebay that for some reason hasn't showed up yet. Imagine that....the post office being busy this time of year. I've stopped shipping eggs until after the holidays. Too many delays.
How did your's look when you candled?

I bet those eggs are difficult to see into! The Wellie eggs are dark enough but some of the maran eggs can be dark brown.
Hmmmm, I was wondering about incubation temperatures in the winter??? I read someplace that they should be lower during the winter so the tops of the eggs don't get too hot? However, I have a circulated air HovaBator so the temperature should be even throughout, right? I am running it a little under 100 (about 99-99.5) but maybe I should be running at 100*? I really love my HB and have never had any temperature spikes in it. It holds the humidity right on as well.
I did a dry hatch once (for the first 18 days) and would NOT recommend it.I am awaiting shipped eggs from a few different states...supposedly should arrive today but tracker is not updating...i am hoping to set about 40 eggs tomorrow or friday depending on arrival...they will need to rest at least 6-8 hrs before i set them too...i have wheaten/blue wheaten ameracaunas, olive eggers, easter eggers, few welsummers, paint and splash bearded silkies and a few 'mystery' eggs for fun (-; this will be my first incubation...always have used a broody before. new incubator is running a steady 100F past few days...thinking of doing a dry incubation the first 17-18 days and then hiking the humidity for hatch...lots of people have had luck with this and fewer 'stuck' chicks...however i am in the desert and my reading on hygro. is 18 % without water...suppose i could mist them every other day as some do. what do you think? GOOD LUCK on your hatch. I am going to try to take some pics from set to hatch and upload them here.
Cindy in AZ

By the way, your humidity might be lower than the 18% that your hygrometer is reading. Mine will only go down to 16% even if the incubator is bone dry and it's in the middle of summer here in California.
Hope you get your eggs today. You're going to need a BIG brooder for all those babies.
