California - Northern

@capayvalleychick

There were 5 our and one more zipping when I left for work! They are doing very well with hatching.

I have been bothered a lot more during hatches. This one is nice one. The one that I wonder about will be next weekend. The shipped UofA blues hatched over three days and was a very long single breed hatch. I have had longer when I had a big combination hatch--that one had the first chck hatch on day 19 and the last one hatch on day 23. That is a challenge to keep humidity up and get the older chicks out so that they do not mess up the eggs still hatching.

I'm glad that they are hatching well. The calcium level in this new breeder feed is 3.5-4.3%. That's a little high for a heritage breed, and I was concerned about it since some of the Dorkings last year had trouble getting out of the egg, when they were eating a different feed with lower calcium.

Since they are hatching in the baskets, are they ok in them all day while you are at work?

Sorry about your Pene eggs. Maybe that rooster needs to watch the UofA male to see how it's done.
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It will be interesting to see if these Blues hatch faster than the shipped ones.
 
@capayvalleychick

There were 5 our and one more zipping when I left for work! They are doing very well with hatching.

I have been bothered a lot more during hatches. This one is nice one. The one that I wonder about will be next weekend. The shipped UofA blues hatched over three days and was a very long single breed hatch. I have had longer when I had a big combination hatch--that one had the first chck hatch on day 19 and the last one hatch on day 23. That is a challenge to keep humidity up and get the older chicks out so that they do not mess up the eggs still hatching.
Yeah for hatching chicks!!!
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My last hatch had chicks hatching on days 19-20 and one straggler that didn't pip until day 22. Crazy!
 
Spraddle leg usually happens right at hatch, or within a day or so. (might not be severe enough at first to see it) Leg issues later on is usually a slipped hock, in which they need to be put down. I have never been successful fixing it, and end up putting them down later.
My crazy cat who almost burned our house down a couple months ago managed to somehow knock over one of my brooders a few weeks ago. One chick was hurt and I'm suspecting it was a slipped hock. I taped the leg in place and put the chick in a sling contraption that I made with a plastic container & a tube sock with holes cut in it. I nursed it like that for a week with food placed on the sock and giving it vitamin water with a syringe. Then she started getting out of the sling so I used a cut drinking straw to keep the leg in line. She hobbled all over the brooder and seemed to be recovering. I took the straw off every day to check it. She got to the point of walking with it and the joint staying straight. Then I made the mistake of only taping it and putting her back in the brooder. Within a day, both of her legs had problems. She didn't act like she was suffering but we put her down because she was not improving. I think that if I kept the straw on for a few more days, she might have made it. I'm a champion for the underdog but I need to learn that I can't save every chick with problems. I have finally learned to keep hands off during hatching and my hatch rate/survival rate has gone up. They can actually hatch without my help! Go figure!
 
Thank you! I have been looking for something like this but won't buy this one! I Mickey Moused a pipe over my stock tank brooder to hold my heat lamp. I told DH that I've learned from him how to make due with what we have around the house! I do think that I have him convinced that buying a heat plate or two would be a good idea. My electric bill was about $50 more this past month due I think to heat lamps and incubators.
 
Okay lets look at it this way. this is what all of the ones who died have done: get larthargic,stop eating/drinking,lay down and keep their eyes. losed then thry stop chirping. also some of them did the gasping for air thing iddk if the others did though
 
My crazy cat who almost burned our house down a couple months ago managed to somehow knock over one of my brooders a few weeks ago. One chick was hurt and I'm suspecting it was a slipped hock. I taped the leg in place and put the chick in a sling contraption that I made with a plastic container & a tube sock with holes cut in it. I nursed it like that for a week with food placed on the sock and giving it vitamin water with a syringe. Then she started getting out of the sling so I used a cut drinking straw to keep the leg in line. She hobbled all over the brooder and seemed to be recovering. I took the straw off every day to check it. She got to the point of walking with it and the joint staying straight. Then I made the mistake of only taping it and putting her back in the brooder. Within a day, both of her legs had problems. She didn't act like she was suffering but we put her down because she was not improving. I think that if I kept the straw on for a few more days, she might have made it. I'm a champion for the underdog but I need to learn that I can't save every chick with problems. I have finally learned to keep hands off during hatching and my hatch rate/survival rate has gone up. They can actually hatch without my help! Go figure!
Exactly!

It is a good thing that I am at work today. I expect to have at least 10 hatched when I get home tonight. I do not help any more and cull weak ones quickly so that they do not suffer.
 
Im starting to think ghey are just gonna keep dropping. the rest are runninh around but so were the two last night that died.
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they are getting past the critical time. They should stop dying now.

Did the shipment get stuck somewhere? Was it a day late?

See if Cackle will refund the whole order. With that many dead they really should.
 

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