Chick died in egg

Hallienicole

In the Brooder
Joined
May 9, 2019
Messages
11
Reaction score
28
Points
39
Day 21was yesterday. Chick pipped but that's it. Went to see if I could assist it with hatching, it hadn't made any progress in over 24 hours. The chick was dead inside the egg. I'm not sure why. I should have helped it sooner I think. I had 2 hatch on day 20 then one over night that night. On day 21 one egg pipped and was in the egg upside down I think, I had to help it out a little but is just fine now. I have one egg halfway through the unzipping process and 3 more that haven't even pipped. Now I'm nervous about the remaining chicks hatching at all. Any advice?
 
Sorry you lost one. Sometimes we just can’t tell why they give up. :(

One piece of advice, if one stops part way thru zipping (I mean actual zip started, progress of an inch or more) and stops for more than a few minutes at a time and seems to not be progressing, I will pop the air cell end of the egg off myself. Just let it kick out of the bottom half on its own.

Candle the last few eggs when you remove chicks. Please don’t do the “float” test to see if they are still alive. I hate that test. You should be able to tell with bright enough candler light.

Good luck!
 
Sorry you lost one. Sometimes we just can’t tell why they give up. :(

One piece of advice, if one stops part way thru zipping (I mean actual zip started, progress of an inch or more) and stops for more than a few minutes at a time and seems to not be progressing, I will pop the air cell end of the egg off myself. Just let it kick out of the bottom half on its own.

Candle the last few eggs when you remove chicks. Please don’t do the “float” test to see if they are still alive. I hate that test. You should be able to tell with bright enough candler light.

Good luck!
When candling the other eggs what should I look for?
 
It sounds like you may have opened the incubator a lot. Did the humidity drop too much and shrink wrap the chick? Sometimes they aren't strong enough to hatch due to genetics, which isn't your fault. When candling, look for movement and listen for peeps.
 
When candling the other eggs what should I look for?

Movement and/or drawdown of the air cell or internal pips and peep sounds would be positive things

Clear-ish fluid area and lack of veins between the body and the air cell membrane would be bad. If you suspect they have died, twist the egg back and forth a bit.... if it free-floats, its likely dead. Also smell the eggs and make sure they don't smell rotten
 
For the one with no air cell but movement, has it pipped anywhere? They will sometimes take 24 to 36 hours from first pip to full hatch, but if they have externally pipped then they have air to breathe during that time.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom