UrbanHomesteadTX
Songster
I've had several successful hatches at home with my own incubator and eggs from my own chickens, I've thoroughly enjoyed each and every hatch I've conducted! But, Yikes! I am quickly discovering how difficult it is to hatch shipped eggs!
My ma is a health teacher for Middle Schoolers, she's also involved in teaching Career Pathways and runs the school's Animal Care club. I've had the joy (and misery) of volunteering for her to discuss and present to her students about careers in Conservation, and, yes, Animal Care. So, we were excited to finally get approval from the school to hatch out chicks. As part of the whole thing, the school purchased and had an incubator and eggs delivered for the project. The students that had interest in animals have been so excited for the chicks to hatch...
Well, downhill from there. We had been sent quail eggs first, chicken eggs over a week later. We threw the shipped chicken eggs in with the already incubating quail eggs and filled the rest of the incubator out with our own hatching eggs. I was out of town and not able to come around for any part of the incubating process of the quail, but everything seemed to be running smoothly. At lockdown for the quail, I had ma take my incubator to school to put the quail in for hatching, so as not to disturb the chick eggs, and the kids could actually see through the clear top. By day 19 (a Friday) the quail had yet to hatch, so I finally came up to try to candle and see what was up. Of the 12, seven were completely clear, with the other five seeming to have all quit at various stages of development. Only one seemed to have gotten to the fully developed stage before quitting.
Now, it also seems the chicken eggs are having the same luck. Of the shipped eggs, we have absolutely no idea what breed they are (the department wouldn't tell us) But we had what looked to be 6 standard, and 6 bantam eggs. I candled Friday as I went to help with the quail and already had to toss half that were clear or had very well-defined blood rings. Then, this morning (the following Monday) I had taken her to work and candled again. All of the bantams that were left had blood rings, as well as one of the standards. It's not yet week two, and already we're down to only two eggs from the school district. We're certainly happy we added our own eggs in there, or else the entire semester's hatch may have been a complete failure. Here's to hoping for the survival of the last two eggs!
Any thoughts as to what we could have done to aid the hatch? We had them rest for 24 hours before starting incubating (mainly to ensure they'd hatch in the middle of the week and less risk of them hatching early or late when no one is there.) And the incubator seems to be doing it's job well enough. It's a Styrofoam incubator, and both the incubator's temperature and the student thermometer that we threw in there read the same and stays consistent during the week. The turner works like a charm... the only thing that might be sketchy is the hygrometer, I'm a little suspicious of it's accuracy. My own eggs seem to be doing fine in there with just a few clears pulled on Friday. I'm mainly curious as to why all the Bantams were early quitters (With very thick, defined blood rings. I have never seen any so thick before!)
Also, a shout out to Dallas ISD for being the absolute worse at purchasing. It's not just the chick eggs, it's all the other critters and critter equipment as well.
Every request for order is a mystery.
My ma is a health teacher for Middle Schoolers, she's also involved in teaching Career Pathways and runs the school's Animal Care club. I've had the joy (and misery) of volunteering for her to discuss and present to her students about careers in Conservation, and, yes, Animal Care. So, we were excited to finally get approval from the school to hatch out chicks. As part of the whole thing, the school purchased and had an incubator and eggs delivered for the project. The students that had interest in animals have been so excited for the chicks to hatch...
Well, downhill from there. We had been sent quail eggs first, chicken eggs over a week later. We threw the shipped chicken eggs in with the already incubating quail eggs and filled the rest of the incubator out with our own hatching eggs. I was out of town and not able to come around for any part of the incubating process of the quail, but everything seemed to be running smoothly. At lockdown for the quail, I had ma take my incubator to school to put the quail in for hatching, so as not to disturb the chick eggs, and the kids could actually see through the clear top. By day 19 (a Friday) the quail had yet to hatch, so I finally came up to try to candle and see what was up. Of the 12, seven were completely clear, with the other five seeming to have all quit at various stages of development. Only one seemed to have gotten to the fully developed stage before quitting.
Now, it also seems the chicken eggs are having the same luck. Of the shipped eggs, we have absolutely no idea what breed they are (the department wouldn't tell us) But we had what looked to be 6 standard, and 6 bantam eggs. I candled Friday as I went to help with the quail and already had to toss half that were clear or had very well-defined blood rings. Then, this morning (the following Monday) I had taken her to work and candled again. All of the bantams that were left had blood rings, as well as one of the standards. It's not yet week two, and already we're down to only two eggs from the school district. We're certainly happy we added our own eggs in there, or else the entire semester's hatch may have been a complete failure. Here's to hoping for the survival of the last two eggs!
Any thoughts as to what we could have done to aid the hatch? We had them rest for 24 hours before starting incubating (mainly to ensure they'd hatch in the middle of the week and less risk of them hatching early or late when no one is there.) And the incubator seems to be doing it's job well enough. It's a Styrofoam incubator, and both the incubator's temperature and the student thermometer that we threw in there read the same and stays consistent during the week. The turner works like a charm... the only thing that might be sketchy is the hygrometer, I'm a little suspicious of it's accuracy. My own eggs seem to be doing fine in there with just a few clears pulled on Friday. I'm mainly curious as to why all the Bantams were early quitters (With very thick, defined blood rings. I have never seen any so thick before!)
Also, a shout out to Dallas ISD for being the absolute worse at purchasing. It's not just the chick eggs, it's all the other critters and critter equipment as well.
