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I took this picture yesterday when I was testing out my new light for candling eggs. This egg wasn't touched or moved out of the incubator, it stayed in place in the turner. Does this look like veins starting to form to you guys? It is one of the bantam eggs.
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I took this picture yesterday when I was testing out my new light for candling eggs. This egg wasn't touched or moved out of the incubator, it stayed in place in the turner. Does this look like veins starting to form to you guys? It is one of the bantam eggs.
That looks like a viable egg! Congrats!

-Kathy
 
I took this picture yesterday when I was testing out my new light for candling eggs. This egg wasn't touched or moved out of the incubator, it stayed in place in the turner. Does this look like veins starting to form to you guys? It is one of the bantam eggs.

Absolutely, that is perfect!
 
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Woohoo!! Thanks! How eggciting. :) I can't wait until I can take them out to candle on day 7.
I'm no expert, but if you can see it doing it that way, there's probably no reason to re-candle at day 7 unless you have some you aren't sure about.

-Kathy
 
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Yay!! I'm so excited. Only 3 more days until I can take them all out of the turner to candle. Should I expect all the viable eggs to look like the bantam egg in the picture? Should I mark the ones that don't have veins, then candle them again in a few days and throw them out if they still don't have veins?
 
Sad news. I just learned chicken seamen can not be frozen liquid nitrogen or no. This is not from a super reliable source but has still crushed my dreams.
Can it be shipped the was they ship horse semen? -Kathy
I bred my mare through shipped semen years ago. Boy, did I get the weirdest looks standing in line with a similar shipping container marked " BIOHAZARD " . The postal workers were weirded out too, LOL. Meanwhile, last week I was shipping a box of hatching eggs and the PO lady asked " anything liquid, fragile, hazardous, etc" like they normally do. Well my son, let it slip that the box was " alive ". That total freaked the PO lady out and she called for her supervisor, LOL. After much explaining, they accepted the package of eggs. I learned not to mention that I am shipping fertile hatching eggs..some PO workers don't understand. They think I am trying to send chicks in a box.:rolleyes: It would be so cool if we could ship chicken semen like they do other livestock:) Trisha
 
Quote:
Woohoo!! Thanks! How eggciting. :) I can't wait until I can take them out to candle on day 7.
I'm no expert, but if you can see it doing it that way, there's probably no reason to re-candle at day 7 unless you have some you aren't sure about.

-Kathy

Oh, I meant I'm going to candle the rest of the eggs on day 7.
 
I'm no expert, but if you can see it doing it that way, there's probably no reason to re-candle at day 7 unless you have some you aren't sure about.

-Kathy

Day 7 is the first day on the air cell chart.

 
Yay!! I'm so excited. Only 3 more days until I can take them all out of the turner to candle. Should I expect all the viable eggs to look like the bantam egg in the picture? Should I mark the ones that don't have veins, then candle them again in a few days and throw them out if they still don't have veins?

They should, I actually usually do my first candling at 4 days. But I don't pick up the eggs either. In fact I try not to handle the eggs unless I can't tell and need a better look at an individual egg.

Since you are new to candling, I wouldn't dispose of any egg until you are ready to lock them down at about day 18. The exception would be if an egg smells or leaks (yikes!). Those should be removed immediately.

I usually candle by removing the entire tray of eggs from the cabinet sometime after the sun goes down (that way the whole room is dark). When I was using a genesis, I would just lift the edge of the lid and put my hand inside. Part of my routine is to run my nose along the row of eggs (like a dog doing detection work). If anything smells, then I will pick up individual eggs to make sure I'm getting out any bad ones. I give those an individual sniff and a good look with my light.

For the most part, I just touch the top of each egg with the light and look for veining and movement later on.

On the night of day 17, I pick up each egg to candle them. If an egg is a quitter (blood ring, funny marbled look, small embryo in a discolored egg, etc.) or clear they are disposed of at that point. Then on day 18 in the daylight I can just move all the eggs into cartons, I make a schematic chart of the breeds and then put the carton into my hatcher.

Then I spend three days with my nose pressed to the window every time I walk past, LOL (which is often).

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Oh, and a reminder, always thoroughly wash your hands before picking up the eggs, you wouldn't want to transfer anything to the shell (chemicals, lotions, oils from your skin, etc.)
 

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