Hands on hatching and help

I love reading. I would probably read it before watching it. I barely watch TV that's not animated anymore hahahaha. **** kids..
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I love reading as well, though I do enjoy movies. I think between my reading and chicken watching, my husband thinks I am a very lazy person, though its okay for him to sit and watch tv for a few hours.
roll.png
 
I love reading as well, though I do enjoy movies. I think between my reading and chicken watching, my husband thinks I am a very lazy person, though its okay for him to sit and watch tv for a few hours. :rolleyes:

Seriously yours and my husband could be brothers. Mine thinks the same thing and also watches tv quite a bit in the evening's. He isn't in to the whole chicken thing and he doesn't read. We are the true meaning of opposites attract lol.. :)
 
S
Have to share these 11 days old

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400


Aaawwwww!!!! I have a couple of day olds that I could not remember when they were due....so I checked them 2 days ago....thinking that they needed to be locked town today....well last night I went to just check and 2 had hatched! So I checked the rest of the eggs but the last 2 were dis. So I took out the 2 little fluffies and they are now in their brooder!!!
400

400


We didn't even hear any peeps from the inubator.....but then again we have been glued to the Olympics all week! :lau
 
Ugh I have almost 20 orpington eggs and only 2 are developing. I don't know what's been up with the postal service lately but they are starting to really make me mad!! Not one of my variety orpingtons are developing!! So bummed out.. :(
 
#812 of 812
a few seconds ago
ARTic
???...A duckling has started hatching during the night and is coming out back wards, pointy end first & is chirping alot!...DO I NEED TO HELP IT???...or leave it to it???
(it's hatching in my home.made polystyrene Incubator in my bathroom.
 
1
CAYUGA ducks information please :-D
CAYUGA ducks information please :-D

#1 of 22
7/6/16
ARTic
I have 3 drakes and 3 females which are all laying. Will the females hatch fertile eggs in winter? One nest has 15 eggs in it now. How long can duck eggs sit in a nest before they are no longer able to be hatched?
I am going to sell the smallest drake but was wondering which of the other two drakes should I sell?...The one with a greenish beak or the one who is the biggest??
Elva (white) has decided to share Edna's chicken bed who has gone cluck, so I have put 13 fertile CAYUGA eggs under them. They have been sitting on the eggs for 14 days now, which means baby ducks in another 14 days...I'm so excited :-D. ;-)
We all live in Hamilton New Zealand.

#2 of 22
7/6/16
21hens-incharge
I would keep the drake that is the best with the hens. Mine never sat eggs in winter but in early spring it was a different story. They sat very well in early spring.

You are mid winter right now if I am correct? If so give her some time to decide to sit the eggs. It could be another 2 months. I would say to keep taking the eggs until she is actually showing signs that she is broody. You will know as she will stay on the nest and the drake will get protective. You have 3 hens so they will add to the nest as well even after she is broody. I would mark the eggs so you know which ones are to be left in the nest for hatching once she sets.

#3 of 22
7/7/16
ARTic
Hi and thank you for the advice. I'd like to know how long eggs are still fertile if they haven't been sat on and heated up? Do they become uneed fertile after a certain time period?

#4 of 22
7/8/16
21hens-incharge
I believe that duck eggs are fertile for a while as the hen will not set until she has laid all her eggs for that batch. This can be a week or more depending on breed and how many they usually have in a clutch.

I have been doing a bit of reading as your original post has me interested.

If you do not need them for cooking then I would say to go ahead and leave some in the nest to see if she starts to set them. Once she has set on the nest for a few days incubation has begun and they should hatch in about 28 to 30 days.

Of course you will want to mark the ones you are leaving in the nest so you can gather ones not destined to hatch. That way you do not end up with a hen trying to set to many and none actually getting to hatch.

Hopefully more people with more experience will chime in.

#5 of 22
7/8/16
Welshies
Okay- I will answer your original post and additional questions.
Females don't usually hatch eggs in winter, but if the weather is warm and that is when they were born, they might sit. You can also candle the eggs and incubate the fertile ones yourself. In spring and summer, Cayugas are often very dependable mothers and hatch their own. They take time to build up a nest though, and then start sitting after they are satisfied there are enough eggs. *If your hen can't cover all the eggs with her body, when she leaves for a drink or snack or bath, remove the dirtiest and infertile ones so she can cover them all completely.
And you should let her sit the full term (26-32 days from the time ALL the eggs were finally laid) After 32 days, remove the eggs as they are infertile. Throughout her term, whenever she leaves the nest (she should do so daily for food, water, and a bath), remove any rotten or smelly eggs. (Try not to disturb them too much, only do this the first and third week, and maybe the fourth).

As for selling the drakes, it's up to you. If they are both friendly and good, and healthy, you should pick the most colorful if you want good sale on your extra ducklings. If yu are more interested in dual purpose or meat, pick the bigger one. And if one is unhealthy, aggressive, high strung, get rid of it for sure.

And duck eggs can be kept for eating up to 2 or 3 months (if refridgerated) and still be good. Fertile eggs (if not smelly) are good for 10-20 days, rarely 30 (I'd assume) when left outside. HOWEVER, if you "store" the eggs at the right humidity and temperature for a week before incubating them (typically artificially in this case) it improves the hatch rate, and they can be kept up to 4 weeks after.

#6 of 22
7/9/16
addarr
I need some input please
My poor Cyuga has been sitting for well over a month like a dutiful momma she babies and protects her nest only comes off once a day to eat potty and bath. Will hiss at anyone that comes to close. I candled her eggs about 2-3 weeks ago and they were about 20 to 25 days ish.
I finally took the chance and candled again yesterday and there has been absolutely no progress. One egg is missing I assumed that the one that was rolled away and consumed was for another ducks nest. I was wrong.
Either way she has not abandoned the nest or rolled any more away and won't come off but still once a day. I am not sure how to proceed the poor thing tried so hard.
1) what could have happened so far along? Could it have been the outside heat?
2) how to help her moving forward? Take them and remove her nest? Let her figure it out?
She is only a little over a year old this season her first try at it.

#7 of 22
7/11/16
ARTic

Quote:
Originally Posted by Welshies View Post

Okay- I will answer your original post and additional questions.
Females don't usually hatch eggs in winter, but if the weather is warm and that is when they were born, they might sit. You can also candle the eggs and incubate the fertile ones yourself. In spring and summer, Cayugas are often very dependable mothers and hatch their own. They take time to build up a nest though, and then start sitting after they are satisfied there are enough eggs. *If your hen can't cover all the eggs with her body, when she leaves for a drink or snack or bath, remove the dirtiest and infertile ones so she can cover them all completely.
And you should let her sit the full term (26-32 days from the time ALL the eggs were finally laid) After 32 days, remove the eggs as they are infertile. Throughout her term, whenever she leaves the nest (she should do so daily for food, water, and a bath), remove any rotten or smelly eggs. (Try not to disturb them too much, only do this the first and third week, and maybe the fourth).

As for selling the drakes, it's up to you. If they are both friendly and good, and healthy, you should pick the most colorful if you want good sale on your extra ducklings. If yu are more interested in dual purpose or meat, pick the bigger one. And if one is unhealthy, aggressive, high strung, get rid of it for sure.

And duck eggs can be kept for eating up to 2 or 3 months (if refridgerated) and still be good. Fertile eggs (if not smelly) are good for 10-20 days, rarely 30 (I'd assume) when left outside. HOWEVER, if you "store" the eggs at the right humidity and temperature for a week before incubating them (typically artificially in this case) it improves the hatch rate, and they can be kept up to 4 weeks after.
"""Thank you so much for your feedback :) """ I have 3 nest with 4, 16 & 8 eggs in the newest nest. I have decided to buy a digital Temperature and humidity reader and light fitting and maybe use a computer fan and build an incubation box.
My two chickens have been sitting on 8 fertile CAYUGA eggs for 18 days and another 5 eggs for 8 days.
I have candles the eggs and hope that I'm viewing the right progress from watching YouTube videos. All the 8 eggs (18 days) are full and the air bubble seems to be getting larger on some. 1 egg has obvious veins and the others are dark and full. None are smelly and I'm hoping that all 13 are going to hatch.
I have eaten about 8 eggs from myducks that were born on the 25th of November and they were all fertile.
On centre again I thank you for your feedback and information and I hope I'm doing the right things with the eggs :-D
Another question :-D is it normal for the females to have Black legs and the males to have yellow legs?
Also do some Cayuga's have greenish bills/beaks?

#8 of 22
7/11/16
Welshies
Greenish bills aren't uncommon... as long as they are black. Can you post a closer picture of a male? If their feet and bill are orange they could be a cross...

Also, as females age they get whiter, so don't panic if this happens to yours

#9 of 22
a month ago
addarr
Today's warm fuzzy! After a failed attempt with her own eggs and putting in some from my khaki Campbell's we have duckling 1 of possible 3. She worked so hard. She was strutting around when I came out with dinner.
See that silly spot she built her nest it drives me crazy.
Yea babies!

#10 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
OMG I have 6 baby Cayuga ducklings peeping in there eggs and tap tap tapping. I hope the other 2 start tapping to.
They are hatching after 24-25 days under my 2 chickens.


#11 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
????..."Do I take the hatched Cayuga ducklings inside and pop them in a warm light box or do I take the other 2 lots of eggs out from the chickens and put them in the incubation box that I made last night???...?"
It Winter here in Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand. It's not a very cold Winter but there is rain sometimes.
Will the chickens be able to raise the ducklings in Winter? there is no snow here

#12 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic


#13 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
Today's weather is 12.5 c

#14 of 22
25 days ago
21hens-incharge
Congratulations on having good mama hens! I would not try and let chickens raise ducklings myself as I have no experience with doing so. I would bring them in and keep them inside under a brooder lamp in a brooder box. Not sure about hoping a mama hen will keep them warm and dry enough.

That is me though ...... caution and all that.

#15 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
This week's weather is meant to be 12.5c-15c
Humidity today is 80%


#16 of 22
25 days ago
21hens-incharge
That is not a bad temp for the little ones if mama is doing the mama thing and keeping them warm when they need it.
What is the overnight low supposed to be?

#17 of 22
23 days ago
ARTic
5 ducklings have hatched so far. The first of the 8 died :-(

#18 of 22
20 days ago
ARTic
They turned the roof of there bedroom into a hamic. There so so cute my little Cayuga ducklings. 3 days old

#19 of 22
20 days ago
ARTic


#20 of 22
19 days ago
21hens-incharge
That is fantastic! I am glad most of them made it. Losing one happens from time to time. The ducklings look to be doing quite well!

#21 of 22
12 minutes ago
ARTic

I have just bought this 48 egg Incubator and it arrived yesterday.
I tried it out for 4 hours and it did everything that it was meant to. It rolled the eggs twice plus the temperature and humidity stabilised.
Has anyone else used one of these to hatch Cayuga duck eggs?
??? What is the best way to STERILISE this before I use it??? I'm,asking this because it is second hand and has been used only once. It looks clean but I want to be safe before I use it.
Also I have 3 ducklings hatching right now in my home made polystyrene box in my bathroom.
Ducks, ducklings and more ducklings
400
 
1
CAYUGA ducks information please :-D
CAYUGA ducks information please :-D

#1 of 22
7/6/16
ARTic
I have 3 drakes and 3 females which are all laying. Will the females hatch fertile eggs in winter? One nest has 15 eggs in it now. How long can duck eggs sit in a nest before they are no longer able to be hatched?
I am going to sell the smallest drake but was wondering which of the other two drakes should I sell?...The one with a greenish beak or the one who is the biggest??
Elva (white) has decided to share Edna's chicken bed who has gone cluck, so I have put 13 fertile CAYUGA eggs under them. They have been sitting on the eggs for 14 days now, which means baby ducks in another 14 days...I'm so excited :-D. ;-)
We all live in Hamilton New Zealand.

#2 of 22
7/6/16
21hens-incharge
I would keep the drake that is the best with the hens. Mine never sat eggs in winter but in early spring it was a different story. They sat very well in early spring.

You are mid winter right now if I am correct? If so give her some time to decide to sit the eggs. It could be another 2 months. I would say to keep taking the eggs until she is actually showing signs that she is broody. You will know as she will stay on the nest and the drake will get protective. You have 3 hens so they will add to the nest as well even after she is broody. I would mark the eggs so you know which ones are to be left in the nest for hatching once she sets.

#3 of 22
7/7/16
ARTic
Hi and thank you for the advice. I'd like to know how long eggs are still fertile if they haven't been sat on and heated up? Do they become uneed fertile after a certain time period?

#4 of 22
7/8/16
21hens-incharge
I believe that duck eggs are fertile for a while as the hen will not set until she has laid all her eggs for that batch. This can be a week or more depending on breed and how many they usually have in a clutch.

I have been doing a bit of reading as your original post has me interested.

If you do not need them for cooking then I would say to go ahead and leave some in the nest to see if she starts to set them. Once she has set on the nest for a few days incubation has begun and they should hatch in about 28 to 30 days.

Of course you will want to mark the ones you are leaving in the nest so you can gather ones not destined to hatch. That way you do not end up with a hen trying to set to many and none actually getting to hatch.

Hopefully more people with more experience will chime in.

#5 of 22
7/8/16
Welshies
Okay- I will answer your original post and additional questions.
Females don't usually hatch eggs in winter, but if the weather is warm and that is when they were born, they might sit. You can also candle the eggs and incubate the fertile ones yourself. In spring and summer, Cayugas are often very dependable mothers and hatch their own. They take time to build up a nest though, and then start sitting after they are satisfied there are enough eggs. *If your hen can't cover all the eggs with her body, when she leaves for a drink or snack or bath, remove the dirtiest and infertile ones so she can cover them all completely.
And you should let her sit the full term (26-32 days from the time ALL the eggs were finally laid) After 32 days, remove the eggs as they are infertile. Throughout her term, whenever she leaves the nest (she should do so daily for food, water, and a bath), remove any rotten or smelly eggs. (Try not to disturb them too much, only do this the first and third week, and maybe the fourth).

As for selling the drakes, it's up to you. If they are both friendly and good, and healthy, you should pick the most colorful if you want good sale on your extra ducklings. If yu are more interested in dual purpose or meat, pick the bigger one. And if one is unhealthy, aggressive, high strung, get rid of it for sure.

And duck eggs can be kept for eating up to 2 or 3 months (if refridgerated) and still be good. Fertile eggs (if not smelly) are good for 10-20 days, rarely 30 (I'd assume) when left outside. HOWEVER, if you "store" the eggs at the right humidity and temperature for a week before incubating them (typically artificially in this case) it improves the hatch rate, and they can be kept up to 4 weeks after.

#6 of 22
7/9/16
addarr
I need some input please
My poor Cyuga has been sitting for well over a month like a dutiful momma she babies and protects her nest only comes off once a day to eat potty and bath. Will hiss at anyone that comes to close. I candled her eggs about 2-3 weeks ago and they were about 20 to 25 days ish.
I finally took the chance and candled again yesterday and there has been absolutely no progress. One egg is missing I assumed that the one that was rolled away and consumed was for another ducks nest. I was wrong.
Either way she has not abandoned the nest or rolled any more away and won't come off but still once a day. I am not sure how to proceed the poor thing tried so hard.
1) what could have happened so far along? Could it have been the outside heat?
2) how to help her moving forward? Take them and remove her nest? Let her figure it out?
She is only a little over a year old this season her first try at it.

#7 of 22
7/11/16
ARTic

Quote:
Originally Posted by Welshies View Post

Okay- I will answer your original post and additional questions.
Females don't usually hatch eggs in winter, but if the weather is warm and that is when they were born, they might sit. You can also candle the eggs and incubate the fertile ones yourself. In spring and summer, Cayugas are often very dependable mothers and hatch their own. They take time to build up a nest though, and then start sitting after they are satisfied there are enough eggs. *If your hen can't cover all the eggs with her body, when she leaves for a drink or snack or bath, remove the dirtiest and infertile ones so she can cover them all completely.
And you should let her sit the full term (26-32 days from the time ALL the eggs were finally laid) After 32 days, remove the eggs as they are infertile. Throughout her term, whenever she leaves the nest (she should do so daily for food, water, and a bath), remove any rotten or smelly eggs. (Try not to disturb them too much, only do this the first and third week, and maybe the fourth).

As for selling the drakes, it's up to you. If they are both friendly and good, and healthy, you should pick the most colorful if you want good sale on your extra ducklings. If yu are more interested in dual purpose or meat, pick the bigger one. And if one is unhealthy, aggressive, high strung, get rid of it for sure.

And duck eggs can be kept for eating up to 2 or 3 months (if refridgerated) and still be good. Fertile eggs (if not smelly) are good for 10-20 days, rarely 30 (I'd assume) when left outside. HOWEVER, if you "store" the eggs at the right humidity and temperature for a week before incubating them (typically artificially in this case) it improves the hatch rate, and they can be kept up to 4 weeks after.
"""Thank you so much for your feedback :) """ I have 3 nest with 4, 16 & 8 eggs in the newest nest. I have decided to buy a digital Temperature and humidity reader and light fitting and maybe use a computer fan and build an incubation box.
My two chickens have been sitting on 8 fertile CAYUGA eggs for 18 days and another 5 eggs for 8 days.
I have candles the eggs and hope that I'm viewing the right progress from watching YouTube videos. All the 8 eggs (18 days) are full and the air bubble seems to be getting larger on some. 1 egg has obvious veins and the others are dark and full. None are smelly and I'm hoping that all 13 are going to hatch.
I have eaten about 8 eggs from myducks that were born on the 25th of November and they were all fertile.
On centre again I thank you for your feedback and information and I hope I'm doing the right things with the eggs :-D
Another question :-D is it normal for the females to have Black legs and the males to have yellow legs?
Also do some Cayuga's have greenish bills/beaks?

#8 of 22
7/11/16
Welshies
Greenish bills aren't uncommon... as long as they are black. Can you post a closer picture of a male? If their feet and bill are orange they could be a cross...

Also, as females age they get whiter, so don't panic if this happens to yours

#9 of 22
a month ago
addarr
Today's warm fuzzy! After a failed attempt with her own eggs and putting in some from my khaki Campbell's we have duckling 1 of possible 3. She worked so hard. She was strutting around when I came out with dinner.
See that silly spot she built her nest it drives me crazy.
Yea babies!

#10 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
OMG I have 6 baby Cayuga ducklings peeping in there eggs and tap tap tapping. I hope the other 2 start tapping to.
They are hatching after 24-25 days under my 2 chickens.


#11 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
????..."Do I take the hatched Cayuga ducklings inside and pop them in a warm light box or do I take the other 2 lots of eggs out from the chickens and put them in the incubation box that I made last night???...?"
It Winter here in Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand. It's not a very cold Winter but there is rain sometimes.
Will the chickens be able to raise the ducklings in Winter? there is no snow here

#12 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic


#13 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
Today's weather is 12.5 c

#14 of 22
25 days ago
21hens-incharge
Congratulations on having good mama hens! I would not try and let chickens raise ducklings myself as I have no experience with doing so. I would bring them in and keep them inside under a brooder lamp in a brooder box. Not sure about hoping a mama hen will keep them warm and dry enough.

That is me though ...... caution and all that.

#15 of 22
25 days ago
ARTic
This week's weather is meant to be 12.5c-15c
Humidity today is 80%


#16 of 22
25 days ago
21hens-incharge
That is not a bad temp for the little ones if mama is doing the mama thing and keeping them warm when they need it.
What is the overnight low supposed to be?

#17 of 22
23 days ago
ARTic
5 ducklings have hatched so far. The first of the 8 died :-(

#18 of 22
20 days ago
ARTic
They turned the roof of there bedroom into a hamic. There so so cute my little Cayuga ducklings. 3 days old

#19 of 22
20 days ago
ARTic


#20 of 22
19 days ago
21hens-incharge
That is fantastic! I am glad most of them made it. Losing one happens from time to time. The ducklings look to be doing quite well!

#21 of 22
12 minutes ago
ARTic

I have just bought this 48 egg Incubator and it arrived yesterday.
I tried it out for 4 hours and it did everything that it was meant to. It rolled the eggs twice plus the temperature and humidity stabilised.
Has anyone else used one of these to hatch Cayuga duck eggs?
??? What is the best way to STERILISE this before I use it??? I'm,asking this because it is second hand and has been used only once. It looks clean but I want to be safe before I use it.
Also I have 3 ducklings hatching right now in my home made polystyrene box in my bathroom.
Ducks, ducklings and more ducklings
I use bleach water to clean my bators. Just make sure that you double check the accuracy of the thermometer and hygrometer of the bator before you trust it.
 

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