I don't know. We were messaging back and forth for a while (a couple weeks) then when I suggested that she definitely not, not turn them, no reply and haven't heard back since. And you know me, I was totally nice about it but it must have turned her off.
Ok, so the experiment has been done! I don't want to sound harsh or anything but I was afraid if I tried it, I would hatch a bunch of malformed chicks. At least I know the outcome was none hatching
Since you said they were shipped and from what you describe I'm thinking they are saddle shaped??
Trust me, we are all insane and that's why we get along so well!
Congratulations on the hatcher! You have to post pics of this guy/girl!! And that is great that you're getting more eggs. Don't hesitate to ask any questions and recalibrate your instruments before the new set!
I totally understand what you are saying. I'm a single mom to 3 boys and I'm also a crazy chicken lady. I think most of us are! Glad you joined the thread!
I'm pretty sure because they are shipped she thinks she'll get a better hatch rate. She didn't specific how bad the air cells were. When I asked she said "what you would expect shipping to Alaska".
That's a cop out... I know a lot of eggs go through the PO to Alaskan rough, but a lot go through just fine... :/
I'm in the middle of a difficult hatch here. Had a cemani that was internally pipped but something didn't look quite right. I opened it up a little bit and saw that it had pipped very close to the bottom of the air cell and that there was a lot of liquid in the egg. It was inhaling liquid. There was nothing I could do until the veins in the membrane at the top of the air cell finished absorbing but I did open the air cell up all the way and tried to position it so it wasn't in the liquid so much.
The veins absorbed and I pulled the membrane back and slipped its head out. It's now in a cup to finish absorbing. I'm not optimistic though - chances are good that it already aspirated some fluid.
