GOOD MORNING EVERYONE!
Sipping coffee and catching up on all the action.......
Chicks, it is a total bummer to have to put a chick down.
At the same time, deep in your heart, there is no denying that it is the responsible thing to do.
I've had to help many hatch. An incubator is just a poor attempt at imitating mother nature.
I've had several hatches that were running a day or two late before pipping. Of course,
this was my fault because the temps weren't right. It wasn't because I didn't try....
I had three different thermometers in the incubator and they all said something different!
Any way, in my crazy thinking - - - if the mistake is mine then it is up to me to fix it!
That is why I intervene and help hatch sometimes. Now, if I KNOW I did everything right..... I don't
intervene.
With 7 hatches under my belt this year, I have only had two born with messed up legs. Additionally, I've had a few chicks die
on their own, after assisting them out of the shell. Those were so weak by the time that I intervened that I knew when I went to bed, they would probably not be with us in the morning. The upside to helping the chicks hatch is .. . .. . I have many, many, more that were strong and healthy than deformed or weak. I am not worried about passing on genes for genetically WEAK hatchers because the ones I assist are clearly the result on incubator issues....
I started this year with a homemade incubator.... so we had to do some refinements on the fly for the first few hatches. Then my dad destroyed that incubator in one his dementia moments. I had to start all over with a store bought incubator. There is a learning curve on this incubator too. I hope I finally have it right ---- but I just discovered that taking the lid off to add water can cause the thermostat to need recalibration.... I was all day yesterday adjusting it! UGGH...what a pain!
So, the long and short of the book I just wrote is that, PERSONALLY and it is just my opinion, I don't regret helping my chicks hatch.... even if it means I have to cull one or two later on.
Sometimes, I wish I had feathers so that I could do the job the way mother nature intended it to be done SQUAWK!
Sipping coffee and catching up on all the action.......
Chicks, it is a total bummer to have to put a chick down.
At the same time, deep in your heart, there is no denying that it is the responsible thing to do.
I've had to help many hatch. An incubator is just a poor attempt at imitating mother nature.
I've had several hatches that were running a day or two late before pipping. Of course,
this was my fault because the temps weren't right. It wasn't because I didn't try....
I had three different thermometers in the incubator and they all said something different!
Any way, in my crazy thinking - - - if the mistake is mine then it is up to me to fix it!
That is why I intervene and help hatch sometimes. Now, if I KNOW I did everything right..... I don't
intervene.
With 7 hatches under my belt this year, I have only had two born with messed up legs. Additionally, I've had a few chicks die
on their own, after assisting them out of the shell. Those were so weak by the time that I intervened that I knew when I went to bed, they would probably not be with us in the morning. The upside to helping the chicks hatch is .. . .. . I have many, many, more that were strong and healthy than deformed or weak. I am not worried about passing on genes for genetically WEAK hatchers because the ones I assist are clearly the result on incubator issues....
I started this year with a homemade incubator.... so we had to do some refinements on the fly for the first few hatches. Then my dad destroyed that incubator in one his dementia moments. I had to start all over with a store bought incubator. There is a learning curve on this incubator too. I hope I finally have it right ---- but I just discovered that taking the lid off to add water can cause the thermostat to need recalibration.... I was all day yesterday adjusting it! UGGH...what a pain!
So, the long and short of the book I just wrote is that, PERSONALLY and it is just my opinion, I don't regret helping my chicks hatch.... even if it means I have to cull one or two later on.


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