I searched the UPA website but I couldn't find this in the hatching problems article.
My first peachick I hatched out, Peep, had his feet all curled up. I figured 1. This is how they keep their feet in the shell and 2. Since we had to help him out of his egg he was probably in there too long so that is why I had to hold him and mess with his feet to help him straighten the toes by laying his feet flat on my hand. Last year I hatched 5 or so peachicks, and these I did not have to help out of the shell, but some of them couldn't straighten their toes, one could not even uncurl his feet and because they hatched at night when I was sleeping, by morning some of their feet had hardened and it was very hard to fix. One I couldn't fix and their feet were just very bad. Yet another chick still kept a crooked toe but as it got older the toe fixed by itself. I also sometimes notice people who get a bird a little cheaper because it has crooked toes. So is this common? I just don't see how it can be I mean it would be impossible to be a large breeder and personally care for each chick's feet individually? This is a main reason I am shying away from incubators...
What causes this? Too much humidity (or too little)? Too much heat (or too little)? Are they not hatching fast enough? I do think the ones that hatched later were the ones with the worst feet. I feel like fixing peachick feet comes up fairly often so is this just something that happens? Does it happen with natural peahen incubation?
I am just making sure because while I am not using my incubator this year, my boyfriend is going to try and hatch out a peachick and I don't want him to have to deal with fixing a peachick's foot when this will be his first time hatching something.
My first peachick I hatched out, Peep, had his feet all curled up. I figured 1. This is how they keep their feet in the shell and 2. Since we had to help him out of his egg he was probably in there too long so that is why I had to hold him and mess with his feet to help him straighten the toes by laying his feet flat on my hand. Last year I hatched 5 or so peachicks, and these I did not have to help out of the shell, but some of them couldn't straighten their toes, one could not even uncurl his feet and because they hatched at night when I was sleeping, by morning some of their feet had hardened and it was very hard to fix. One I couldn't fix and their feet were just very bad. Yet another chick still kept a crooked toe but as it got older the toe fixed by itself. I also sometimes notice people who get a bird a little cheaper because it has crooked toes. So is this common? I just don't see how it can be I mean it would be impossible to be a large breeder and personally care for each chick's feet individually? This is a main reason I am shying away from incubators...
What causes this? Too much humidity (or too little)? Too much heat (or too little)? Are they not hatching fast enough? I do think the ones that hatched later were the ones with the worst feet. I feel like fixing peachick feet comes up fairly often so is this just something that happens? Does it happen with natural peahen incubation?
I am just making sure because while I am not using my incubator this year, my boyfriend is going to try and hatch out a peachick and I don't want him to have to deal with fixing a peachick's foot when this will be his first time hatching something.