Mothersclucker
In the Brooder
Okay...so I am completely new to the whole chicken/duck world. My husband and I have been talking about raising our own flock for nearly 15 years and this year we finally took the plunge and did it. We both grew up on a farms. His parents had chickens and dairy...mine did beef cattle so again, I'm new to all of this.
I recently decided to add ducks to my flock. My 10 year old son and I wanted to hatch them on our own so we purchased a Hova-Bator and eggs. We hit the halfway mark today and out of 12, 8 are active in their shells and looking great! What scares me is all the technical aspects everyone talks of. I understand keeping the temperature consistent and holding humidity but on a tight budget...we don't have anything that reads humidity. We just follow the directions that came with the incubator by keeping the proper channel full of water.
My mother-in-law laughs when I tell her how nervous I am because she explains that when she was raising them they didn't overly stress over humidity levels. Yet all I seem to read are people stating how important it is to keep things at a certain level. So now I'm stressed that none of my eggs will make it because I don't have or know my humidity level. I started misting(spraying) the eggs once a day and always make sure there is water in the channel inside the incubator.
Is there anyone out there with success stories on hatching without all the technical extras? At this point I'd be happy with just a couple of my ducks making it with all that I read. Maybe I'm stressing too much? *Pulls hair out* I'd love to continue hatching my own over the years but if it's this stressful I'm going to end up at the funny farm.
I recently decided to add ducks to my flock. My 10 year old son and I wanted to hatch them on our own so we purchased a Hova-Bator and eggs. We hit the halfway mark today and out of 12, 8 are active in their shells and looking great! What scares me is all the technical aspects everyone talks of. I understand keeping the temperature consistent and holding humidity but on a tight budget...we don't have anything that reads humidity. We just follow the directions that came with the incubator by keeping the proper channel full of water.
My mother-in-law laughs when I tell her how nervous I am because she explains that when she was raising them they didn't overly stress over humidity levels. Yet all I seem to read are people stating how important it is to keep things at a certain level. So now I'm stressed that none of my eggs will make it because I don't have or know my humidity level. I started misting(spraying) the eggs once a day and always make sure there is water in the channel inside the incubator.
Is there anyone out there with success stories on hatching without all the technical extras? At this point I'd be happy with just a couple of my ducks making it with all that I read. Maybe I'm stressing too much? *Pulls hair out* I'd love to continue hatching my own over the years but if it's this stressful I'm going to end up at the funny farm.
I very much appreciate what you've shared. Unfortunately the only person around me that I know of that has ducks is my brother and he didn't hatch them, they were given to him by friends. I asked him about the hygrometer but he said that he didn't have one nor did the few friends that have ducks/fowl either. I'm at day 12 right now and the ones that are left out of the original dozen are quite active in their shells. I know this can change clear up to hatch day so trying not to get too overly excited. This is all just a learning process but I'm keeping a log book and checking on them every hour or so. 