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Again that's your call. The person that I quoted above has decades of experience with waterfowl. I personally believe duck eggs should be turned on their side for optimum incubation conditions. I would suggest you turn the eggs more than twice a day and go with an odd number of turns, say 3 times a day. If you turn twice a day, your eggs would always be ending up on the same side each night. A hen isnt that technical, she just shifts the eggs with her beak occasionally.
Is it too late to start hand turning? I wouldn't think so. I'm not an expert an such things, but I can tell you what I would do based on my reading and experience. If I were you, I would begin hand turning.
Again that's your call. The person that I quoted above has decades of experience with waterfowl. I personally believe duck eggs should be turned on their side for optimum incubation conditions. I would suggest you turn the eggs more than twice a day and go with an odd number of turns, say 3 times a day. If you turn twice a day, your eggs would always be ending up on the same side each night. A hen isnt that technical, she just shifts the eggs with her beak occasionally.
Is it too late to start hand turning? I wouldn't think so. I'm not an expert an such things, but I can tell you what I would do based on my reading and experience. If I were you, I would begin hand turning.
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