- Jan 29, 2012
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Hi I am Keena, in El Dorado, KS. New to this chicken thing, but planning on learning lots, finishing the coop in a few weeks and getting started with my chickies! I am excited and can't wait
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Hi I am Keena, in El Dorado, KS. New to this chicken thing, but planning on learning lots, finishing the coop in a few weeks and getting started with my chickies! I am excited and can't wait
Hawkeye, I have only one white serama pair and she has been putting out an eggabout every other day. I put them in an egg carton in the garage which is about 40-50 degrees. I got about eight over a 15 day period and put them in an incubator four days ago and all eight are fertile. It keeps from having too many age variations. I tip at a different angle when ever I put a new egg in. Seems to work. I do the same with my geese eggs. When it starts to get warmer, I just put them under the steps in the garage which is a bit cooler.
Thanks for the info! Really, I have no idea what I'm doing here. Okay, so how do you know they are fertile? Do you check them some how? Are the two eggs on my counter-- are those trying to grow right now, or are they stalled out until I get them into the incubator??
Just wanted to add, that I think my eggs are fertile, because we ate some of them and they had bullseyes. Other than that-- I have no idea if the specific eggs I have gotten recently are fertile. I'm assuming so.... based on the ones we cracked open and ate.
Hawkeye - This is the site I used a lot when I first started incubating eggs. I started with duck and goose eggs and the site is set up with duck eggs in mind, but an egg is an egg. LOL The biggest difference would be the time line. Chicken eggs hatch in 21 days and duck eggs in 28 or more days. So the development of a chicken egg at different "days" will be a bit different. http://minkhollow.ca/MHF/doku.php?id=farm:about_incubation Check out the whole site for lots of interesting stuff.
A great thing to have is a way to candle the eggs. You can make one (instructions are on the net, and it is easy) or just use a bright flashlight. You will learn a lot about the eggs by candling them. Or, just wait the time and see if they hatch or not.
The eggs on your counter will not start developing until they are at the right temperature constantly. That is why a chicken can lay an egg into a nest each day and then when she starts sitting (keeping the eggs at that correct temp) they all will start developing and then all hatch at the same time, not one a day.
I do not know of any way to know if an egg is fertile or not by looking at it. That is one of the things people check for when they candle at 10 days or whatever their schedule is. Then they can take the ones that are not developing out.
I hope some of that helps.
Hi I am Keena, in El Dorado, KS. New to this chicken thing, but planning on learning lots, finishing the coop in a few weeks and getting started with my chickies! I am excited and can't wait
Okay, I know I"m going to miss a lot of responses I was thinking of while trying to catch up, but here goes:
To the new folks- HI!!! Welcome to the Kansas thread and hope you have a great experience here- we love to help out and share when we can, and we rely on one anothers' experiences when we have questions. It's a great group of peeps.
Rittert- for a banty, you might also use a bit less, but Ivy is right- the back of the neck is easy. The main thing to remember is that the pour-on MUST be administered to the skin (not the feathers or fluff) or orally because it's an oil-based topical that is absorbed through the skin to work in a systemic manner. It won't work if it isn't absorbed into their flesh. The injectable can be use topically, but works better orally...and it's nice to give them some yummy fresh fruit to eat following because it's a terrible thing to have to taste (don't ask how I know).
Hawkeye, It's impossible to tell when an egg is fertile until it starts to develop. Basically, you just wait until you have several, up to 20 days (after that the number that will start to develop plummets) and set them all at once. I write the date on them and pop them in. I don't turn mine prior to setting, because I'm not convinced it makes any difference since no development is occurring. I do try to keep them cool, as the proteins will break down more quickly if they are warmer, which makes the whites watery. Since I ship, I prefer a robust egg to hit the streets.
I wrap a bit of foil in clear packing tape and make a flexible collar for my LED flashlight. This makes it really easy to candle on day 10, at which point it's VERY apparent which eggs are developing and which aren't.
Okay, off to work!
I just don't want to end up with ONE lonely little chick because the rest failed and one made it. I'll hope that at the very least two of them make it, since I won't be incubating large numbers AND it's my first time ever with the incubator-- I could totally mess it up.![]()