Day 24 and 1/2 no piping..... temprature problems. Then I opened the

maf2008

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Day 24 and 1/2 no piping..... temprature problems. Then
I opened the eggs.....

The yolk sak looked like the chicks were still day 17/18... sadly most of the 24 were fully fertle, most dead a few still alive but dying
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I do not see how these eggs could have gone on to produce healthy chicks. This is why I culled at day 24 1/2

Does anyone think the weak chickens would have gone on to hatch on day 28? I feel like a murderer
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I know what the problem was my cheap thermomitor. I just wnet out and got a good one... but I feel soooooo sad and like I did something wrong....

I set bator at 99 and the therm must have been lower. The membrane was soft and flexable, could not be humidity. Anyone cheer me up please????
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So sorry. I had a similar experience last month with my first time at incubating. I got the 'bator from a guy at work, and it's prob'ly twenty-plus years old. I didn't know the wafer should have been changed, and the temperature fluctuated drastic'ly. It went up to 107 at least once, and 106 another time.

Out of the nine eggs I put in, three were clear. I dropped one candling on day ten, a couple days after the first roasting. I felt terrible when I saw the little tiny chick with the huge eyes flapping it's little wings.

One hatched on day twenty, and I was ecstatic. On day twenty-one, there wasn't anything going on with the other four. Another hatched on day twenty-two, and I was over-joyed. There wasn't anything happening with the last three on day twenty-three, so I took the eggs out and buried them.

It's a big learning process. A good breeder is committed to doing the best job they can. You got a better thermometer, and I got a better thermostat. Next time, we'll both do better.

A good breeder must also be willing to cull an animal that doesn't meet certain minimum standards. Incubation length is one of those standards. There are people who say cull all unhatched eggs on day twenty-two, because if you don't, you can be perpetuating the genes that make an embryo develop slower.

And, feeling bad at accidentally killing an animal is perfectly normal. I killed and butchered twenty-five meat birds last year with only a little twinge. I have another thirty to do in four weeks. But dropping that one egg nearly had me in tears.
 
Thanks Nemo..... I know I did what had to be done... I do not think they would have made it.... after day 25 anyway.... My pullets are going to start laying next month and I have a determined rooster.... Do you think I can hatch eggs maybe 4 weeks after they start laying if the eggs are medium or bigger??? thanks
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Quote:
 
More expensive thermometers are not necessarily more accurate -- but you can check yours against a fever thermometer and find out what if any mental correction factor to apply. Since most people have a digital fever thermometer and they are fairly accurate.

Big hug, see whatcha can do and it will probably be better next time,

Pat
 

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