temp has been a constant 99.5 and I did dry incubate, at lockdown I brought the humidity to 60 percent.
I got three chicks now that hatched. I wasn't sure about my last candling because I didn't have a good candling method. but tonight I candled the rest of my eggs and turns out that out of the 15 I placed in there only were actually fertilized :-( one died as previously mentioned, 2 are still in the incubator, as I did see chicks in there when I candled but uhmm not really sure if they are still alive, they didn't pip yet and I hear nothing coming from them, I will give them till tomorrow night. the three that did hatch are all doing really well.
as I mentioned this is my first time hatching anything successfully. the last time I attempted it nothing hatched.
I am getting the eggs from my own hens and I think maybe the roos are just not fertilizing all the eggs, and obviously impossible to tell if they are all fertilized by looking at them from the outside lol.
in 2 days time I will clean out the incubator and try again, another batch and this time I will add a tiny bit of moisture throughout the fist 18 days and then back to 60 percent during lockdown. and hopefully I will be more successful. Only way to learn is to do it, so I am not discouraged yet, we will see with the next hatch how things go.
the last chick that hatched was really downed, the membrane was dry but the chick on the inside was really wet, I placed her right away under the brooder lamp I was afraid to leave her in the incubator with the fan running as wet as she was I felt the humidity and fan might be detrimental to her. the dryer heat of the brooder lamp helped her out immensily and she is doing well.
they are crossed between a columbian X roo and Rhode Island red hens. we will see what they turn out to be like eventually.
thanks for your help,
Ema