mtnvwheritage
In the Brooder
- Mar 7, 2017
- 24
- 6
- 16
Fair question.
I have to answer it in two regards though.
I think anyone can have a successful hatch while being able to open the incubator providing they keep their humidity up and they have incubators that recover the loss quickly which most table top incubators do. To take out chicks, shells, readjust eggs. I don't think a person with average intelligence needs extra training. (Of course the average level of intelligence seems to be diminishing in my opinion.)
As for assisting I do think that's a whole other ballgame. I think anyone with guidance, the willingness to learn and at least a modicum of patience can be a successful hands on hatcher in regards to assisting, but I think to really be proficient and do it right at the right time, the experience of others that are successful is very much needed, or at least the most beneficial.
As much as I hate to say this, I learned a lot from Sally's assisting article. The importance of time and knowing when to stop, specifically. I still had to learn to draw my own conclusions of course and follow my instincts, but the most important thing, I believe is knowing enough to give them that 24 hours ish, not rushing in, as hard as it is, and knowing when to stop once you start, accepting the fact, the chick is not ready, and giving them that extra time.
I believe that most people that swear off assisting because they've tried it and never had any luck are on the average in two groups. First group being the ones that really didn't know what they were doing. Assisted too soon, too fast-not stopping when they should have and their lack of knowledge was their downfall. Second group being assisting a rather lost cause. If you have a delayed hatch on day 24 and you're assisting because the chicks are too weak, of course you shouldn't expect a high success rate with the assists. The chicks are already at a disadvantage due to a less than successful incubation. I'm not saying a willing person shouldn't help, just that your expectations for success shouldn't be as high. If you are assisting a malpositioned, on time hatcher, or a chick that has membrane drying to him because of a less than perfect humidity condition, there is no reason to consider it a lost cause because it needs help or too assume it's too weak or not good enough to be given a chance. I've honestly only ever had one assist of an on time chick die, and that was 9 days after hatch due to digestive issues I believe. Could those issues have made it weaker to need assistance, it's possible. At hatch it seemed very strong and active. It did for a week with very running diarrhea being the only thing out of place. (It was way more than typical pasty butt.) But I gave it a chance. Assisting does mean that you will have to face the possibility that the chick you help may need to be later culled because of a greater problem. That's not easy. But from my perspective, I'd rather have to cull that one chick periodically if I am able to save one, two, three others by giving them that chance. Bottom line, no matter what you decide you have to be able to live with that decision because second guessing is never going to fix it.
Amen and adorable! Good job duck mommy!
Very good answer, I'm definitely a "newbie" but have done lots of research, and because of that was able to save a both a duck from a previous hatch and a chick with my last hatch due to the membrane drying out... however I had read when to help and when to stop, and made sure to be very careful and put it back when it needed more time etc... it actually in its own movements pulled off the last bit which was at its belly and started bleeding, luckily I had read and had my cornstarch ready to stop the bleed! Now its a month old and is perfectly healthy, I wouldn't have that one had I not helped... it was the only one out of the hatch that did make it, but I think I got a bad batch of hatching eggs or something because every one of them was malpositioned including the one I assisted... I also have a background in labor and delivery, so tend to be a "helper" while also being educated and careful
