Do orpingtons often hatch late?

hmlongino

Songster
13 Years
Jun 12, 2009
253
25
234
Fayetteville, GA
I have noticed that some breeds hatch slightly earlier than others... like white leghorns, for instance.

But... what about orpingtons? I have lavender orpingtons in the bator now and I was wondering if they often hatch late? They aren't "late" yet... but I usually have pips at this point, day 21.

Thanks!
Holly
 
i have orpingtons in the bator and its day 21 for me and i dont hear any peeps
barnie.gif
so maybe they hatch later
 
I just had 2 pipped. My guineas, that shared a bator with them, are hatching EARLY in a separate hatching box... so temp wasn't the issue. I think that some breeds just hatch slightly later/earlier than others. They are all so different, it makes sense.

Let's cross our fingers that our orpingtons decide to make an entrance today!
 
What causes chicks to hatch earlier or later than 21 day is the temperature in the incubator. If you have it set as much as one degree lower than 99.7, you will get a little later hatch, about a day for each degree. The same goes for if it is too warm, then they hatch earlier. Breed should not make any difference.
 
I know temperature causes delays or accelerated hatching, but I would have to argue that there is fluctuation among breeds, as well. How else do you explain multiple breeds hatching in the same bator at distinctly different days?
 
Another thing that affects the hatch is lineage. If people keep hatching and keeping chicks that do hatch late, they are breeding this trait into their line. The next generation will be late hatchers.

If you talk to "old timers" they will tell you to let the hatch go for 24 hours and if they don't hatch throw the eggs away.

This trait is probably seen more in the rare breeds or lines because of the value of the bird.
 
pips&peeps :

Another thing that affects the hatch is lineage. If people keep hatching and keeping chicks that do hatch late, they are breeding this trait into their line. The next generation will be late hatchers.

If you talk to "old timers" they will tell you to let the hatch go for 24 hours and if they don't hatch throw the eggs away.

This trait is probably seen more in the rare breeds or lines because of the value of the bird.

Good point! I had not thought of that before, and it does make sense.​
 
There is a thought. I hadn't looked at it that way. I know eggs I set from my flock almost always hatch before eggs I buy and have shipped, even if I set them all at the same time.
That is something to think about though, pitching the ones who don't hatch in the 24-hour window. Once I get my numbers up I may do that. I don't have them lag too much though, usually within 48-hours I have them all hatched.
 

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