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- #21
Rachnwoody
In the Brooder
- Nov 30, 2023
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I’m very sorrySad to report, became obvious that chick was not sleeping.
We decided to open the bator to see for certain, and on removal we were pretty certain that it was too late. So we went ahead and carefully started to remove small pieces of shell, to find chick had definitely died.
I took photos as we unpicked the shell, in the hope that someone more experienced could offer advice as to what went soo wrong?
Its beak was sticking out of the shell, so it was breathing, when we unpeeled the shell it appeared the membrane was ok?
There were no veins until we reached half way down the egg, there were some veins and a small amount of yoke in the lower half. The chick is moist and well formed, I just don’t know what went wrong?
Thank you.I’m very sorry
It looks to me like the yolk was fully absorbed
The swollen belly is from absorbing
It’s really hard to say what happened but
My thought would be possibly baby gave up when it couldn’t zip out
That’s just a guess
Baby looked like it was going to hatch so I’m not sure you could have done a thing differentThank you.
With just one egg left in bator, I really appreciate any feedback in regards if there was something I did wrong or whether I could have intervened earlier?
I guess it’s a steep learning curve, and as a nurse I understand that not everyone survives, but I still feel so disappointed, we were soooo close.
We will now focus on little Egg B, and hope it makes it through ok![]()
He was positioned wrong, chicks i've tried to help who were positioned wrong tend to survive about a week at most and then don't make it. The pictures for B earlier on did look to have a second aircell, which I've only seen happen with tiny cracks in the shell letting in air where it shouldnt be. Which would also explain the larger aircell at the top. With less space it was quite likely for this chick to be malpositioned there wasnt really anything you could have done.Graphic images attached.
Ok, final outcome for Egg B.
4 days ago when candles Egg B could be seen pulsing against the air cell.
Following day, no internal pip and no movement. Left in incubator for further two days, no movement during those days and still no internal pip.
Today after candling I decided to float egg. Floated fat end up almost vertically.
So at that point I decided to open up the egg and try to see what went wrong.
I cracked egg at fastest point into the air cell. The membrane was in tact, but the instant I opened the membrane I could see the chick was laying in a massive pool of blood. So I assume it hit a vein when it was attempting to pip.
When I fully hatched the chick, which was dead, its foot was over its head.
I have attached photos for any comments or advice as I am a first timer and am making a lot of assumptions based only on what I have read.