Susan Skylark
Songster
While torturing my quail eggs to see what you can and can’t do to them and still get them to hatch, I was rather puzzled by a twenty five percent mortality rate in late term embryos post water candling (also a No turn and cold weather hatch but water candling is not something I do routinely). But then I got the same results in 2 subsequent hatches (cold weather yes, but no water candling and they were turned frequently) that I wasn’t intentionally trying to botch up. My previous “fridge egg” experiments yielded excellent development rates but I didn’t take them to hatch (or maybe only a couple?, not enough to notice a hatching pattern anyway). The last three hatches (over fifty eggs in total) have all been December/January hatches with ambient temps in the pens around 32F. Eggs were collected every couple days, sometimes stored in the fridge for a couple days, nothing froze but they were cold for 48-72 hours plus. Normally I have less than ten percent late embryonic death/failure to hatch. These three have been 25-40%. The only common denominator is the cold. Great development rates but significantly reduced hatch rates. The take home: gather hatching eggs several times daily in near freezing temps. Don’t store hatching eggs in the fridge. If you are hatching fridge/cold weather eggs expect reduced hatch rates and hatch extra!