I certainly would not chuck the eggs. They will still be good to eat even if you don't continue with the incubation.
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Did she actually sit on them for 30 hours?..That's really not enough time...Store them and wait..Just eggs so you might come out with Chicks..Don't keep them longer than 10 days or they might not be fertile anymore.
Won't hurt to try..
I remember that one, lol. Let me see if I can find it.I'm sure @casportpony did an accidental experiment in respect of this where eggs were started and then got accidentally left on a bench top for a week or so from memory, then may even have been put into the fridge before finally being successfully incubated and L believe there was no turning involved during this period. It is a long time since I read her post about it and I may have the details wrong, but hopefully she can enlighten us.
I would certainly agree that a few hours in neither here nor there and the eggs could easily be stored on the bench top with occasional turning for a few days until incubation is restarted.
Trying to kill eggs experiment...
Step 1. Remove 8 eggs from broody after 1 week incubation.
Step 2. Place eggs on kitchen counter.
Step 3. Leave eggs alone for one week on kitchen.
Step 4. Place eggs in killerbator (Janoel 48).
Step 5. Open killer bator several times every day.
Step 6. Forget to turn eggs.
Step 7. Don't add water and see where humidity ends up, which is usually 10%
Step 8. Wait until eggs pip externally, then raise humidity to 50%
Step 9. Keep opening killerbator 5-10 times a day.
Experiment failed, lol, all 8 chicks hatched and flourished!
All joking aside, I wish I had this sort of luck with peafowl.
Everyone, please know that I was joking when I composed this. I did not really try to kill the eggs.
Amazing, right? Yeah, they all hatched about two weeks later.Woah, how is that even possible? The eggs must have had live embryos inside when you took them from the broody so what happened during the time they were left in your kitchen? It makes me think of a Sci fi movie where someone is cryogenically frozen and defrosted in the future...
Did they all hatch on time (I.e. After two weeks in the incubator)?
x2I certainly would not chuck the eggs. They will still be good to eat even if you don't continue with the incubation.