Do you take all eggs out of the incubator and candle or a few at a time?

Hootrvil

In the Brooder
Mar 7, 2024
14
15
26
I haven't hatched eggs in probably 15 years. When it comes time to candle, I can't remember if I took the lid off the incubator and then did each egg, or tried not to take the lid off and just pull them one at a time?
What's the best process? Thank you!
 
I haven't hatched eggs in probably 15 years. When it comes time to candle, I can't remember if I took the lid off the incubator and then did each egg, or tried not to take the lid off and just pull them one at a time?
What's the best process? Thank you!
It would partly depend on how many eggs. Some incubators only hold 3 eggs, some hold a few dozen, some hold hundreds.

For just a few, I would open the incubator, candle each egg, then close it up (assuming you can make the room dark enough to candle effectively.)

But if your incubator holds hundreds of eggs, I would take some out and close the incubator, candle those eggs, then put those eggs back and take out another batch to candle. That way you don't have the incubator open for very long stretches of time.

For a few dozen eggs, if you just want a quick peek inside each one, I would probably leave the incubator open the whole time. But if you want to look carefully and mark the air cell and compare with a chart and then look in the egg again, I would take out a few eggs at a time and close the incubator while you are looking at those ones.

As a general thing, I would not worry about keeping the incubator open for up to 10 or 15 minutes, and probably not too concerned up to about 1/2 hour. Likewise I would not worry about having specific eggs out for 10-15 minutes, and probably okay up to about half an hour. Exception, leave the incubator closed during lockdown (last three days), and don't try to candle during that time.
 
I take the lid off
In fact I take it off and set a timer once a day to cool the eggs
Mom birds leave the nest allowing the eggs to cool while they eat , drink and use the bathroom
Never had an issue and get very high hatch rates 90-100 %
With chickens I only cool with ducks / geese I also mist the eggs while cooling
 
It would partly depend on how many eggs. Some incubators only hold 3 eggs, some hold a few dozen, some hold hundreds.

For just a few, I would open the incubator, candle each egg, then close it up (assuming you can make the room dark enough to candle effectively.)

But if your incubator holds hundreds of eggs, I would take some out and close the incubator, candle those eggs, then put those eggs back and take out another batch to candle. That way you don't have the incubator open for very long stretches of time.

For a few dozen eggs, if you just want a quick peek inside each one, I would probably leave the incubator open the whole time. But if you want to look carefully and mark the air cell and compare with a chart and then look in the egg again, I would take out a few eggs at a time and close the incubator while you are looking at those ones.

As a general thing, I would not worry about keeping the incubator open for up to 10 or 15 minutes, and probably not too concerned up to about 1/2 hour. Likewise I would not worry about having specific eggs out for 10-15 minutes, and probably okay up to about half an hour. Exception, leave the incubator closed during lockdown (last three days), and don't try to candle during that time.
That is very helpful! I have 25 eggs in there...that's what the incubator holds. I'll candle them tonight..and just take off the lid and be quick.
 
I take the lid off
In fact I take it off and set a timer once a day to cool the eggs
Mom birds leave the nest allowing the eggs to cool while they eat , drink and use the bathroom
Never had an issue and get very high hatch rates 90-100 %
With chickens I only cool with ducks / geese I also mist the eggs while cooling
That makes me feel so much better! It will be fine then to be off for 15-20 minutes. Thank you!
 

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