Dgrif5
Chirping
- Jul 27, 2018
- 72
- 94
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Hello, and apologies for the disturbance. We recently had a horrible incident with a fox, and have lost many of our hens and all of our cockerels. To that end, we hope to incubate some of the eggs we have collected, so their legacy can carry on, so to speak. This is our first time incubating outside of using a broody hen, and there seems to be so many differing opinions and advice it's making our head spin (well, mostly mine). We have the Janoel 12 incubator, and have left it running for a few days, making sure it's keeping a steady temperature. It's been wrapped with a towel to help prevent temperature fluctuations, and as it is quite humid here at the moment, no additional water has been added.
We've just added the eggs to it an hour ago, and to try and keep track of the humidity, a cheap hygrometer/thermometer has been put inside, resting on the base out of the way of the moving tray. However, the readings it is showing have me quite concerned. Despite the incubator reading a steady 37.5 degrees C, the device inside has remained at a reading of 35 degrees. in addition, the humidity has remained around 50%, despite the lack of additional water, and this seems a little high. Bear in mind this is a cheap hygrometer/thermometer, and we haven't really had time to properly calibrate it, so it could be way off. Should I trust the incubator and leave it alone, or should I manually raise the temperatures above what it seems to indicate? and should I try to lower the humidity, or just hope it dies down in the next day or so?
Sorry for all the questions, it's just that if this hatch fails, the last eggs of our old hens go with it
Thanks for your time.
We've just added the eggs to it an hour ago, and to try and keep track of the humidity, a cheap hygrometer/thermometer has been put inside, resting on the base out of the way of the moving tray. However, the readings it is showing have me quite concerned. Despite the incubator reading a steady 37.5 degrees C, the device inside has remained at a reading of 35 degrees. in addition, the humidity has remained around 50%, despite the lack of additional water, and this seems a little high. Bear in mind this is a cheap hygrometer/thermometer, and we haven't really had time to properly calibrate it, so it could be way off. Should I trust the incubator and leave it alone, or should I manually raise the temperatures above what it seems to indicate? and should I try to lower the humidity, or just hope it dies down in the next day or so?
Sorry for all the questions, it's just that if this hatch fails, the last eggs of our old hens go with it

Thanks for your time.