California - Northern

I love my Octagon 20 ex advance. I get great hatches in it and I really like how I don't have to worry about temp and humidity anymore. Practically set and forget! Yesterday I almost forgot to ad water to the humidity pump
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In my defense, the incubator is set up in the basement guest room. All 12 of the golden cuckoo Marans pullet eggs I set are growing and due to hatch on the 21st
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Ok, so I looked around and found some like $500. Then I went to Brinsea.com and found the advance EX on sale for $459. Then I googled "Coupon Code Brinsea.com" and found one : ADozenGirlz , for 10% off through November. So that brought it to $413.99. +$38 shipping Is that a screaming deal?? Or is that the norm? I liked the $200-$300 price range, but this one sounds so good. Thank you chickee for the review
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I have one buff EE pullet (I think she just started laying yesterday) plus I am downsizing and have 3 pure buff Ameraucana hens (going on 2 years old) and their daughters 1+ year old EEs (buff x blue wheaten Ameraucana) available. This spring I will have pure wheaten/blue wheaten Ameraucana and Olive Egger chicks out of my golden cuckoo Marans rooster and Ameraucana hens
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I am near Grass Valley.
Ooohhh....That would be great too! My sister is in Penn Valley and I may be visiting her soon. How much would you want for them? The buff sounds great. I can't have roos so would not be worried about breeding them, but really would like one I know is a hen. This is my one EE that I am being toold looks like a Roo. He/she is about 32 weeks now though and has not shown much comb developemnt and does not behave like a Roo. No crowing, seems to be low on the pecking order, does not seem to allow the known hens to eat or show them the food. It just grabs some and runs. I prefer blue eggs but green would be fine. It sounds like Pam is right her in my town so let me see if she has anything. If not I think I can work something out with you.....
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I remember last spring I thought I had egg eaters and someone said this too. You told me I probably only had opportunists and you were right. Turns out then I had brittle shells because I was feeding layer but no extra calcium corrected that problem and no more broken shells in the nests.
Sorry, this will likely be a long post.

I grew up on 40 acres with 20 acres of Prune trees. We moved when I was 17 and we always had chickens. We also had Rabbits when I was very young, Pigs and Cows\steers for meat. One of my first chores was collecting the eggs and then getting them their food and water. It was a huge shock when we had to move to the City and I had to start eating store eggs...Gross(it was the 1970s). In all of those years growing up there was never any talk of Egg eating hens.

When I was in my 20s, my Father in law bought a place near us that had about 15 acres with a pasture and an Olive grove. The place came with chickens and my Father in Law was old school--he did not feed them anything but the odd bit of scratch. He started finding broken eggs and would shoot any hen that he found with egg on her beak. That one was a dreaded Egg Eater! I could not convince him to stop. He went on vacation and we took care of the place for a month. I picked up some chicken layer and got them laying regularly again. That lasted until they returned from vacation.

The hens lasted another several months and then he killed the last of the Dreaded Egg Eaters.....
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Poor hens!

Egg eating hens are so rare that most will never have one. Eggs will break and the hens will eat them. It is normal hen behavior to peck an egg to see if it is viable for hatching. If it breaks she will eat it. Hens close enough will eat it too.

The point to all of this is that 99plus% of egg eating is an indication that something is wrong with the egg. Correct the problem and there will be no more eggs eaten.

There will be broken eggs and Pullets\hens just starting back to laying or reaching point of lay will have eggs that are soft shelled or broken. When this happens it is normal for them to eat the egg.

To correct egg shell problems:

Give them Calcium(adding food grade Diatomaceous earth to feed is a good way to add calcium--then give them free choice oyster shell after the eggs are hard again)
Check for Mites, lice and worms
Give them a good pro biotic every couple of weeks
Give them vitamins every week of so

Cheers!
 
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Ok, so I looked around and found some like $500. Then I went to Brinsea.com and found the advance EX on sale for $459. Then I googled "Coupon Code Brinsea.com" and found one : ADozenGirlz , for 10% off through November. So that brought it to $413.99. +$38 shipping Is that a screaming deal?? Or is that the norm? I liked the $200-$300 price range, but this one sounds so good. Thank you chickee for the review
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I got mine through Brinsea. I believe that is what I paid. When pricing Brinsea's products I have found that by buying them direct it is cheaper than through 2nd party sellers
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I need to buy their high intensity Ova Scope (I have been borrowing a friends) and Brinsea has it for cheaper than anywhere else.

I also incubate in my Octagon and hatch in my Genesis 1588. The Octagons are tight for hatching, but I will hatch in it if I am doing a small batch of eggs or the eggs were expensive and I want the best results possible.
 
I got mine through Brinsea. I believe that is what I paid. When pricing Brinsea's products I have found that by buying them direct it is cheaper than through 2nd party sellers
wink.png


I need to buy their high intensity Ova Scope (I have been borrowing a friends) and Brinsea has it for cheaper than anywhere else.

I also incubate in my Octagon and hatch in my Genesis 1588. The Octagons are tight for hatching, but I will hatch in it if I am doing a small batch of eggs or the eggs were expensive and I want the best results possible.
Get the high intensity ovascope! From Brinsea, you can get one that is certified too.

Yes, buy from Brinsea. You also get an extra warranty if you register the Octagon from them.
 
Anyone care to share their experiences with Sandhill? When will their 2014 catalog come out? How long did you wait? Ever ordered the assortments?

In the spring I am going to begin keeping dual purpose boys for the table...I have to start out with some so I was thinking "Hmmmmm where do I get them?" I have a dream bird list and many of those are available from Sand Hill so last night it hits me that I can pick something I want then fill in the remainder of the order with their 1.65 per Assorted Heavies. But here is the deal...what to do with the girls in the order???

Definitely the opposite problem from most people. So I was thinking that if someone goes in on the order with me (I am fairly certain some local chicken people will) I will take all the boys plus just 3-4 girls but I like to have things all planned out and I don't know if SH fits into my. "Know the date you birds will arrive at least a week in advance. " preference. Please share your experiences if you have them.

I think that along with the heavies I would order just LF frizzles for myself so I am curious if anyone has ordered from them..Jason? Kim? can you tell me your experience? Thanks! Also, I am in Lake County and if anyone close wants in on my grab bag o fluffy butts let me know. Also, if like me, you would love some of what they have we can add your order too. I will brood em until you can get em.
 
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Anyone care to share their experiences with Sandhill? When will their 2014 catalog come out? How long did you wait? Ever ordered the assortments?
Debs_flock, Jason and others have ordered from Sandhill. Order asap and expect to wait. It seems like they have a tendency to send substitutes too.

I bet Deb has some stories to share.


SandHill is a preservation hatchery--Their stock is at best OK.
 
I got mine through Brinsea. I believe that is what I paid. When pricing Brinsea's products I have found that by buying them direct it is cheaper than through 2nd party sellers
wink.png


I need to buy their high intensity Ova Scope (I have been borrowing a friends) and Brinsea has it for cheaper than anywhere else.

I also incubate in my Octagon and hatch in my Genesis 1588. The Octagons are tight for hatching, but I will hatch in it if I am doing a small batch of eggs or the eggs were expensive and I want the best results possible.


Get the high intensity ovascope! From Brinsea, you can get one that is certified too.

Yes, buy from Brinsea. You also get an extra warranty if you register the Octagon from them.
That Ovascope thing...
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I didn't know they had anything like this! That is awesome! My Christmas list keeps getting bigger, lol.Thank you Ron and Chickee.
 
I was wondering if anyone in Northern CA (north of Sacramento...Butte County would be even better)  might have some EE pullets for sale.  I really want some blue or green eggs and the EE I bought from our local feed store looks like is going to be a rooster.  I prefer pullets due to the time of year, but if someone will have chicks or eggs in the spring that would work too.   :fl

I think pam has oes not ees. I have a few ees that have just started laying but im too far.

Sandhill might be ok if you are willing to get anything that hatches that week I do not know one single oerson who has gotten what they ordered when they ordered it however.

If you want eating boys get breese!!! They are fast growers and the best tasting chicken out there. They do have goopy skin however.
 
That Ovascope thing...
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I didn't know they had anything like this! That is awesome! My Christmas list keeps getting bigger, lol.Thank you Ron and Chickee.
Check this out!

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I used my little Canon camera and the high intensity ovascope.
 

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