If you are seeing a shadow that moves around if you turn the egg, then it is the shadow of the yolk. Although its hard with dark brown eggs but at least you should have a concrete very dark area. I would say candle them on Day 14 again and if its still just a shadow, replace all of the eggs with fertile ones.Hi Everyone! I'm new here and have a broody dilemma that I'm hoping for some advice on. My white leghorn went broody about a week ago - just a day after my only rooster (a 7-month old silkie) was killed by a coyote. The roo was my only bantam (with 5 full size hens) and although I think he was having some "success" with his hens, I don't think he'd quite worked out his moves with all of the ladies. Before his untimely end, I know that we had at least some fertilized eggs, but certainly not all. Once I realized my leghorn was broody (this is a first for me!) I collected and gave her the other hens' eggs even though I wasn't positive any of them were fertile, thinking that maybe, just maybe we'd get some silkie cross chicks to remind us of our rooster. Tonight my curiosity got the best of me and I tried to candle a few of them to see if anything was progressing. I think the eggs are on day 7, but I really didn't see anything, except a bit of a shadow in the center of one of the leghorn's eggs. I don't know if this means that none of the eggs were fertile to begin with, if I'm just not good at candling since this is the first time I've tried, or if most of the eggs are too dark shelled for me to see much at this stage with the light I was using (the other eggs are from a RIR and two cuckoo marans with dark brown shells)...
So, do I wait a few more days and try candling again? Do I go ahead and order some fertile eggs to switch out with the possibly infertile ones she's setting now? Or do I just leave my broody girl alone, hope for the best and see what happens in two weeks? Any advice would be much appreciated!!!