Chick died 20 min after hatching

No we buried it this morning. Didn’t take any pictures.

Sorry for your loss. Sometimes, they're just not right inside, and there's nothing we can do. If this happens again, take some pictures and post them, and we may be able to help you get some idea of what went wrong.

This is the hard part of chicken keeping. Sending you supportive thoughts.
 
1st time using an incubator.
My first chick hatched just fine and is doing good. But yesterday my second chick pipped at 2am and then rested an throughout the day you could hear him chirp and started to zip and break out of the egg at 10pm and that happend in less then 10 minutes. When he brook free off the egg there was some blood but for the rest he looked fine but wasn’t very active in trying to get up like the first chick. He was breathing fine and when I looked after 20 minutes it looked like he was gasping and then 10 minutes after that he was dead.
Could I have done something to prevent that or helped it?
I feel horrible because it looked like a perfect chick.
Thank you for the tag, @Mill Chick. Helping people get better at incubating is my love.

@Melieke1985, I'm very sorry! :hugs Once they hatch, there really isn't anything you can do, as they are very weak and need to rest. I do not know why this one died like that.

I stagger hatch 2-3 dozen silkie eggs which hatch every 4-5 days so that's dozens of baby chicks per week, and have never had one hatch itself and die. I've had a couple through the years I had to assist from shipped eggs and I was 50/50 on those, a couple made it, a couple didn't.

Thus, the only things I can think of it being are:

1: The parents may not be in top shape. It matters that they are healthy and eating nutritionally. Every chick, chicken, and duck here gets Kalmbach's Flock Maker. The hens get oyster shell in a dish separate from their feed. I am not saying your chickens aren't healthy though. I'm just letting you know what works for us and is a possible cause if they aren't healthy.

2: Your incubator may vary the temp too much. I would get a hygrometer/thermometer and check what your incubator says it's at. If you get a Govee on Amazon, most of those will track it on your phone for you so you can see any variances. Frequent small variations are normal.

They should be at 99.5 F/37.5 C the entire time of incubation. Humidity should be 40-50% until lockdown, then 65-70% for their last three days.

Don't give up! Try incubating again, soon, as you'll see it gets simpler and more successful as you go.
 

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