Received my 15 wht Leghorn & Delaware eggs today. I placed them in the preheated bator, fingers crossed hoping I got good eggs and my homemade bator is up to the task.
My question is about turning the eggs. I grew up with my grandfather constantly incubating eggs in an old style cylindrical galvanized steel incubator with the eggs always placed on their sides. I realize this is acceptable, afterall it worked for PawPaw and works for setting hens. Yet there seems to be info that suggest a better method is to have the eggs 'on end' switching them back and forth across a 30-45 degrees field of movement. I've placed the eggs in a used egg carton small end down. I'm using another piece of egg carton underneath to prop the eggs over about 15-20 degrees to one side. The intention is to swap the prop underneath from side to side creating a back and forth turning effect of 30-40 degrees.
Is this a suitable amount of rotation back and forth to keep the yolks from sticking to the sides and to allow for proper air-sack formation?
Schlante,
Phillip
My question is about turning the eggs. I grew up with my grandfather constantly incubating eggs in an old style cylindrical galvanized steel incubator with the eggs always placed on their sides. I realize this is acceptable, afterall it worked for PawPaw and works for setting hens. Yet there seems to be info that suggest a better method is to have the eggs 'on end' switching them back and forth across a 30-45 degrees field of movement. I've placed the eggs in a used egg carton small end down. I'm using another piece of egg carton underneath to prop the eggs over about 15-20 degrees to one side. The intention is to swap the prop underneath from side to side creating a back and forth turning effect of 30-40 degrees.
Is this a suitable amount of rotation back and forth to keep the yolks from sticking to the sides and to allow for proper air-sack formation?
Schlante,
Phillip