Eggs in the Homemade Incubator - 1st attempt failed, 2nd attempt

To calibrate a hygrometer you will need:
1/2 cup table salt
approximately 1/4 cup water
coffee cup
hygrometer
large re-sealable freezer bag
1. Place 1/2 cup of salt in the coffee cup, and add the water. Stir for a bit to totally saturate the salt (the salt won't dissolve, it will be more like really wet sand).

2. Place the salt/water mix in a re-sealable plastic bag, along with the hygrometer, and seal the bag. Note: make sure none of the salt/water mix comes in direct contact with the hygrometer.

3. Let this bag aside at room temperature for 8-12 hours, in a location where the temperature is fairly constant.

4. After 8-12 hours, check the reading of the hygrometer. It is best to read it while still in the bag.

The relative humidity in the sealed bag with the salt/water mix should be 75 percent (mine read about 72 percent).

5. For adjustable hygrometers, adjust to read 75 percent. You will have to do this very quickly, or remember how much you need to adjust the setting (e.g. mine read 72 percent rather than 75 percent, so I would need to adjust the dial up 3 percentage points).

If yours is not adjustable (like mine), simply make a note of how "off" your hygrometer reads. If it reads below 75 percent, you will need to add the difference to your actual readings. If your hygrometer read above 75 percent on the calibration, you will need to subtract the difference from your actual reading.
In my example: after sitting in the bag, my hygrometer read 72 percent, when it should have read 75 percent -- a difference of 3 percent. I now add 3 percent to the readings I take on the hygrometer (e.g. in a tank) to get the actual relative humidity.

Remember: always give a hygrometer about 2 hours to stabilize before taking a reading, as changes in the relative humidity may take a while to register accurately on a hygrometer.




HOPE THIS HELPS
 
I calibrated mine just as kelsey describes and it seems to work. I have 2 hygrometers and initially they seemed to have matching readings when I calibrated but then when I put my eggs in the incubator the readings really were divergent. I recalibrated and sure enough, one was -2% and the other was -10% and now they seem very stable. I am trying to maintain humidity about 40% during the first 18 days and then will increase it to 55% or 60% for lock down.

My temps are a mess. I don't really trust any of my thermometers and so am trying to make the best estimate. Aiming for ~101 since I have a still air incubator. We will see. I am only having to make minor adjustments, about once a day to maintain temps. No big spikes either way so far.
 
I, too, have homemade incubator issues. My first several hatches were just OK. Now I know to calibrate my hydrometer. But.... if it is correct, and my humidity is like 50-55% during the first 18 days, is it too high? If so, is it too late for those eggs?
 
Quote:
I am knew to this so if someone more knowledgeable answers your post, listen to them! From what I have read there are a lot of opinions about humidity. Lots of people do keep there humidity around 50% for the first 18 days but then there are others that like to keep their humidity low (around 40%) and never add water unless the humidity gets really low. I am trying the low humidity thing. If you have been running higher than 50% then you might just try to keep a lower humidity for the rest so if there is a lot of excess liquid it has time to evaporate. I bet it will be fine!
 
I am in lockdown of my first hatch of game bantam something crosses and some large red something chicken crosses I got from my friend to lay eating eggs for me this summer lol. We knew the first eggs would likely still be fertile so I saved the first weeks eggs or so. Only three ended up not being fertile.

We are using a styrophone incubator from TSC and just a thermometer. Im not monitering humidity. I had a few hatch out starting Saturday according to my MIL who was comming to check on things and turn the eggs since we thought we were still days away from lockdown, so I assume the hen had been sitting and those eggs had a head start.

I did a dry incubation except just a teaspoon of water maybe 4 times throughout the incubation time after reading that drowning from insufficiant egg evaporation was the number one cause of hatch death.

I think I have two eggs that have stopped developing for whatever reason (but im leaving them in as Im not sure on the candeling) and I had one die after it pipped out the wrong place ( we were still turning the eggs thinking today was lockdown day and apparently shouldnt have been) but every other egg looks to be on track.


So far im very pleased with the dry incubation and did not need to bother doing anything for the four who hatched so far. I think the fith would have made it too had we only known they were further ahead to stop turning the eggs and watch and help the poor thing as needed.

I just spiked the humidity today with two wet hot washclothes and mostly closed the vents and will keep adding water till hatching just in case. Im anxoious for pips to start on the remaining eggs.
 
I am on Day #6 and am waiting to candle until day #8. My humidity is pretty good ~35-40% but I do have to add water or it will drop down to less than 20% in a day or so. I'm only adding a little (1/8 cup or so) every other day. My temperatures drift down so I do end up making little tiny adjustments every so often (maybe once every day or so) and my thermometers don't agree at all and I'm not sure which one to believe, so who knows what's really happening in there.

Family man, how did you make your incubator? Sounds like it holds it has created a pretty stable environment for your chicks-to-be.

Trinity, I am jealous that you are in lockdown already! Can't wait to hear how it goes.
thumbsup.gif
 
Well things are going great. Today I accidentally dropped an egg and it broke, inside blood vessels were forming. Geeez.
 
Well, I think things are going good! So I only have what....6-7 days left? I put em in the 28th. They are due the 18th. When is this lockdown thing, then I add humidity.

Good luck hatching buddy!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom