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Dark browns and greens are a pain in the butt to be able to make a good assumption on.Ok thanks that's really reassuring. I'll leave them all in unless I smell or see a leak. I think I'm just to new at this. I for sure see the healthy ones moving but then their are others that look like their veining? I think. Could be behind a little or it died during shipping since they are shipped eggs. I've watched so many youtube videos but most my eggs are chocolate brown or dark green.. Guess only time will tell..![]()
That's great!!He or she is here! I didn't have to assise ether! It went from not doing anything to hatch to hatched in about 10 mins! It actually hatched about 4 mins before another! Thank you so much everyone! Here is a picture of the one I was worried about right after it hatched and a picture of it cuddling with the one it hatched right before in the incubator in my "drying area" lol I don't let them run around free in the incubator for fear of them knocking into the other eggs that have piped already. I have 5 chicks so far since midnight this morning!
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And this is what I was talking about. The outter membrane should be nice and papery white. That membrane lines the shell...BUT the inner membrane hugs the chick. That is 100% normal. I think a lot of people see this and freak out thinking that it is shrinkwrapping the chick because what do you hear on here the most...shrink wrap shrink wrap shrink wrap. And I will argue this until the day I die. Chicks do not shrink wrap that easily. Shrink wrapping is when all moisture of the membrane is gone and the membrane pulls taunt against the chick. It will literally pull the chick down with it as it shrinks. Think about untreated leather when it gets wet. As the leather dries it shrinks up becomes tight. This doesn't happen in a matter of minutes. It takes a while for this to happen. A chick that has pipped has a greater chance of the membrane that is exposed drying and gluing itself to the chick at the area of exposure. Now a chick with a normal pip in an incubator with adequate humidity can be pipped for 24 hours w/out drying out to a point it will cause complications. The more membrane that is exposed, the longer it is allowed to be exposed the greater the risk. My number one reason I wait till 18 hours to make a pip hole bigger, because once I do, that membrane has more exposure and greater risk to drying out. If at any time be it 6 hours or 16 I see an outter membrane turning brownish/yellow, (the sign that it is drying out.) I will pull it out moisten the membrane and check the inner membrane to make sure it is not adhering to the chick. I have started to prefer using neosporin on exposed membranes cause it does so well keeping them moist. Even in an incubator with high humidity (I think more so with forced air), if you have a large amount of membrane exposed-even if you do not open the bator, it can still start drying out.well, that leads me to a shrink wrap/sticky chicken question. if the inner membrane is starting to close in around the chick--as in the outer membrane is still attached to the shell, and you can see the inner membrane wrapped around the chick instead of attached to the outer membrane, and the inner membrane is still veiny, clear, and pliable, is that ok? in other words, as long as the chick can slide along the inner membrane and the feathers aren't sticking, is it ok if the membrane is encasing the chick instead of sticking to the side of the egg? is that what the inner membrane is supposed to do as everything dries up?
I have NEVER had a pipper or zipper shrink wrap (not saying it never happens, mind you,) and I am constantly in the bator during hatch as I pull my hatchers as they become active and take out shells and flip over pippers that have been knocked.
My shrink wrap occurances have happened after lockdown- normally at draw down and before it can pip. I have had at least one that was able to internally pip, but was shrinkwrapped and could not progress past there. It is my belief most true shrink wrapping happens from either too much moisture loss over incubation causing the membranes to dry too much or at draw down when draw down is extreme. I am going to post pics of shrink wrapping so you can see exactly what I am saying. So here's my spoiler alert.

As long as there are prominent veins, there's not much you can do. That looks perfectly normal to me. I see absolutely no signs of shrink wrapping. (Just remember any time people give advice from a picture, you are the one up close and personally, so your judging is more important than ours.)
i think this actually makes it pretty clear ha! you can see the white membrane still stuck to the shell, but the inner membrane is rubbing against the chick's beak. this chick has been just picking away at the shell instead of zipping. it's been pipped for 22 hours. the problem is that there are still veins in that inner membrane. i'm a little concerned that the membrane is closing in around it, but i am not going to touch that membrane with the veins out like that.