Great news with some bad.

bakerjw

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Yesterday morning (Day 20) my wife heard some peeps from upstairs where we keep the incubator. Upon checking we found 2 peeps sprawled out on top of the other eggs in our Brinsea ECO20. Great! I figured I'd leave them there and see how many more hatched during the day. By the time I got home from work 7 more had hatched and I had yellow peeps jammed everywhere inside of the incubator. Nine of the little buggers were packed in that thing. They had to come out.

I got a brooder box together and quickly moved the chicks over into the brooder and removed the discarded egg shells. I took a paper towel with hot water on it and placed it in an area without any eggs and the humidity came right back up nicely. Over the course of the evening 4 more hatched out and were quickly placed with their comrades in the brooder box bringing the total to 13 out of 20. I made every effort to spike the humidity after opening.

This morning though I found that one of the eggs that had pipped yesterday was silent and upon further inspection found that it hadn't piped through the membrane completely and appeared to have suffocated. I felt terrible that I lost such a completely developed chick like that.

So out of 20 eggs
13 hatched on day 20.
1 hatched out this morning day 21.
1 suffocated and didn't make it.
5 eggs are still cooking.

Compared to my 1 for 43 effort on my first incubation run I am pleased with this outcome.

Not sure if the 5 remaining eggs will do anything but I can always hope for the best.
 
Bakerjw congrats sounds like you did the best you could
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There are different things that can cause a chick to pip but not hatch. It may have been a humidity issue but it is not necessarily for sure that humidity was the cause. Some of those possible causes are not entirely in your control.

Definitely great improvement. Congratulations.

If you plan to do an eggtopsy after the hatch, this might help. I always open unhatched eggs to see if I can learn something.

http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/aa204
 

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