You can see the back and head aren't fluffed out, they've dried but feel hard
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Yay - glad you were there for them.It is still with us and so is it's sibling... went out the next morning and found another one inbetween two ducks that are nesting. Both are now in my incubator, lol.
And you can you neosporin on the beak or any other part of the body.![]()
-Kathy
I think that's in the normal range. I would guess it has something to do with humidity in the incubator.
So my dog is a working line Border Collie...and she herds EVERYTHING, one of her favorite things to herd is baby chicks. For 3 weeks she ignored the incubator, but now that it's chirping it has suddenly become a magical white box worthy of the extremely rare head tilt, and a now undying obsession. She and I are probably thinking the same thing, "Where's the babies? I know they're in there...I can hear them...but I don't see them..."
Hello everyone!, I am so excited to see so many chicken people in my neck of the woods and I can't wait to become part of the community! I've been living in Davis for 4 years and just decided to go native: learning to ride a bike, joined the co-op and added some beautiful orpington ladies to the family. How did everyone hold up in this heat? We sweated it out but the hot wind was pretty brutal
Thanks Ron. The temp may have been a bit high, I kept it at 99.9 like I was told to but maybe I should try putting it at 99.5 next hatch. We'll see how this one goes, maybe this one is just an early bird!
So, question...the chick that hatched this morning is dry but it's not totally fluffy. The feathers on the head and back aren't fluffy, they're hard and dried to the chick. What causes this?