Are any of these alive? (PICS INCLUDED)

BaileyBoy

Chirping
5 Years
Feb 8, 2014
293
14
91
Please tell me if any of these are alive and developing. It is day 20 of incubation. If they are thanks, if not, what should i do and should i wait






























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Those are most definitely duds. At 20 days of incubation, there's absolutely nothing to be done other than get new eggs. I would recommend tossing those out before they start to weep and stink up your incubator. Sorry for the wasted time/effort. It sucks to get duds.
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No, it's not worth waiting. Chicken eggs take 21 days to fully develope. If they haven't shown any signs yet, there's no point- they're infertile.
 
Please don't go by me because I am new at this, and I hope I am wrong, but for day 20, I don't think there is enough growth. I think three and six look like they have more in them, so maybe.....I wouldn't do anything. Wait for someone with more knowledge to answer you and keep proceeding and hope....I am seeing differences in the eggs from each other.
When day did you do your first candling, and what changes can you see since then?
I hope someone gives you better news.
 
I just did a float test on one of them and it did exactly what is was supposed to do, only the air cell floated which means its alive. Do you think its alive now? and also did i just kill it?
 
I will agree a few of them look like they have some slight veining, waiting will not change anything. Incubating eggs is not the same as baking a cake. It will not finish cooking just because you leave it in the oven longer. At 21 days, the eggs are no longer viable, and should be taken care of if you have any other eggs in the incubator, to prevent the spread of harmful bacteria. Here's a helpful chart explaining what eggs should look like at different stages of candling. I realize it says "duck" in the picture, but it's the exact same with chickens, only they take 21 days, not 28.



I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but incubation is a learning process. Once you get the hang of it, it's a lot of fun to see the different stages of development, and a very rewarding experience! Good luck with the next batch.
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I just did a float test on one of them and it did exactly what is was supposed to do, only the air cell floated which means its alive. Do you think its alive now? and also did i just kill it?
The float test does not verify viability. It is used to approximate the age of the egg. People use it to see if the egg has a large enough air cell to sustain an embryo. If the air cell is large enough, the egg floats. But that does not mean the egg is fertile. If you really want to see if you got duds, crack one open and look for a white "bullseye" in the yolk. All egg yolks have a white dot, but if it's fertile that dot will have a ring around it.
 

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