You all with chicks I am not seeing any pics so I know they don't really exist!
They are figments of your imagination from zombing out staring through the glass on your bators and lack of food and drink.


Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You all with chicks I am not seeing any pics so I know they don't really exist!
They are figments of your imagination from zombing out staring through the glass on your bators and lack of food and drink.
After this hatch, not including the hatching eggs I have coming today, That;s what I'm doing too. Going to sell these first that are hatching today.
Quote: O.K. got you, sorry this thread is moving so fast, I miss things completely!
If she pipped 2 days ago she should've started zipping, or at least thinking about it by now. I think it's time to investigate and see if she needs help. Duckling assists are the same as chicks except they take 3x as long. Seriously, mine took about 4 days! So proceed as you will with a chick. Remove a bit of the shell and outer membrane, dampen the inner membrane and check for veins, etc. Also with ducklings you can check the yolk sac absorption progress if you candle them. (I must confess I didn't, I did it the chick way, my duck was malpositioned), but give it a try. Candle the egg and find the lowest point of the air cell, below that is where the yolk should be (unless the duckling is malpositioned). If the yolk has been absorbed you should be able to see a void, or clear space. Also look for blood vessels when you candle. Ducklings vessels show up very well, especially just below the air sac. If you do not see the yolk sac (it would appear as a dark mass) and you do not see blood vessels, chances are ducky is ready to hatch.
But don't rush, take it easy and go slow, as there may still be blood near the navel area, even if there was none visible when candling and the membrane was otherwise clear. I nearly messed up when this happened to me with a recent assist! Try and remove the shell to where you can see the navel area, without removing enough for the duckling to wiggle out. Hope that makes sense!
If she's ready to come out, meaning the yolk has been absorbed and there is no visible blood remove enough of the shell and membrane so the duckling can wiggle out by herself. Let her decide when she's ready.
Good luck!
I babysit and some I have until late in the evenings, something I hope to stop soon! but right now I cant. I can tell by the autos they come in they have cash, and I judge them when I first get a chick out and hand it to them, chicken people take the chick immediately, some that just want them for kids and easter or something back away with a giggle, or look at their kids to get it instead. And they only want one or two chicks and to be honest isn't worth the hassle for 2 chicks, I am terrible I know, but at least I am honest!
Have you done your chicken math lately? What's your count up to?
Quote: I had 107 chickens at one stage. The more the merrier.