California - Northern

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I dealt with a minor case of pasty butt when I got hatchery chicks, but haven't had that problem with any of the chicks that I've bought from breeders. I do keep an eye out for it, and that's why I made sure to wash the gunk off of the one chick that had it stuck over the vent, I know that could have been a major problem! Not exactly pasty butt, but same sort of problem. I will look up info on sticky chicks, thanks! The Olive Egger that just hatched seems to have eyeliner. I will try to get a picture of it through the bator window.
I keep having to open the bator because the Olive Egger has now flipped over onto it's back TWICE(already!!!) and can't right itself. It tries really hard but eventually gives up and just lays there on its back.
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I keep having to open the bator because the Olive Egger has now flipped over onto it's back TWICE(already!!!) and can't right itself. It tries really hard but eventually gives up and just lays there on its back.
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They will basically always end up being able to flip back over on their own. If they don't, there is something wrong with the chick anyway.

It's best to not open the incubator any more than absolutely necessary. You don't want to chance shrink wrapping any other chicks that are pipped/zipped. If you're sure no one else has started, you can work quickly. With experience you can open if necessary even with chicks that are starting to hatch, but as a new hatcher I wouldn't recommend it for you.

I usually only go into the hatcher if I have so many dry chicks they are excessively overrunning the eggs still in progress. And I'm talking like maybe 20+ chicks ready to move out.

Good luck with the rest of your hatch.
 
So I think those of you that were thinking my Black Copper Marans was a boy were correct...I'm really starting to see it now, his face is RED. Anyone want a beautiful, friendly, feather-footed BCM cockerel? :)
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I still say boy, but ill be happy to be wrong! My boys often do not get color until they are MUCH older, for my lines it is not reliable, except if they have some they are boys.
Those are very round feathers however...
Hello!! I am the worst BYC member lol! I drop off the face of the earth for months! I need some help with quail.

I bought a Hovabator Genesis a couple months ago directly from the manufacturer. It came with Bobwhite quail eggs I thought nothing of them and popped them in the bator when they arrived. It did NOT even occur to me that maybe I would need a permit or something? I don't know what kind they are- it just says Bobwhite on their site. They are NOT located in Cali. So I assume they aren't Cali strains? I will call Monday though to verify. They are hatching right now. I thought I would hatch them for fun, then sell them off. I'm not sure I want to raise Bobwhites anyway. But if I need a permit...then I couldn't sell them off so that means I'm stuck with 23 (assuming all that made it to lockdown actually hatch). I'm trying not to freak out. I'm hoping someone in here can enlighten me. :D

They are the cutest little things though!

Technically you do need a permit for bobs, but they only care about local cali/mountian/rare quail. but bobs WILL pass on diseases to your local quail so keep them away from chicken poo. Most people don't know what you need permits for at the permit office, however, so i would not sweat it unless its mountian cali or close species .
Quail are feathering out nicely. I am still looking for that elusive "Manchurian Tuxedo".....but have no idea what I am looking for..










looks like they all have spots coming in on the chest, no white on the Manchurians, ahh well. The little one in the last pic is a regular tux. If your yellow ones get that patch, we will celebrate! You have room for eggs? if so I can refill today, i cant put anything in for a while, going away from the 18-21st.
so the eggs ubder tge phoenix went bad so i gave her a few serama eggs and some polish.
whay wpild make tgem gp bad

Is it hot out? My girls loose their eggs if its getting in the 90-100 frequently. I don't let them hatch in the summer unless they are inside, only raise babies.
Last couple of days up here have been rough.
Eggtopsy on eggs from Chiquita that DH was chilling at night. 3 showgirls, 1 silkie, 1 was upside down in the shell, another seemed to have ruptured the yolk, 1 was bloody inside like it had tried to pip on a vein. The 4 and the maran egg both looked like they should have been able to hatch, everything right where it should have been before pipping but they never did.

I wasn't able to get any improvement on the phoenix cockerels leg and when working with it he was showing signs of pain. So I bit the bullet and put him down today.

/hugs
Do I need to overnight the bird? If not, what shipping speed should I choose? I'm shipping her this afternoon.
even if you are next day, in the heat, you have to overnight, as they do not take up all the boxes to the lab every day, but they take all the overnights. I had a few get lost in the reg mail and miss getting necrod.

My dad was here for a week and I have not been on! I missed about 200 posts, but caught the last 300.

My chicks from the party hatched, and I cant figure out what color these am's are, does anyone remember who had the am eggs on the raffle table? was gonna pm and ask, a whole bunch look lavender...
 
They will basically always end up being able to flip back over on their own. If they don't, there is something wrong with the chick anyway.

It's best to not open the incubator any more than absolutely necessary. You don't want to chance shrink wrapping any other chicks that are pipped/zipped. If you're sure no one else has started, you can work quickly. With experience you can open if necessary even with chicks that are starting to hatch, but as a new hatcher I wouldn't recommend it for you.

I usually only go into the hatcher if I have so many dry chicks they are excessively overrunning the eggs still in progress. And I'm talking like maybe 20+ chicks ready to move out.

Good luck with the rest of your hatch.
It doesn't hurt to keep an eye on them when they are flipped over on their backs. In the course of hatching lots of chicks this year, I have had 3 sticky chicks who stuck to the screen or shelf liner and were not able to turn back over. When it happened the first time, I didn't realize that its side was stuck to the screen and I left it all night and into the next morning. It was a big, healthy looking chick at hatch except for being a little sticky. But it never fully recovered and died a few days later. It was almost like it was flat on one side and its organs were misplaced inside its little body. Perhaps it was a weak chick in the first place. I started using the open weave shelf liner on top of the screen but I still had a couple more stuck chicks. I used a clean, bent skewer inserted through the vent hole on top of my Genesis to make sure the flipped chicks weren't stuck. The majority of my chicks hatched with no problems but I still get a sticky chick or two in each hatch. My incubators are on break right now but when I've moved out all the current chicks and fire them up again, I'm going to play around with the settings to see if I can eliminate that problem.
 

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